This study examined the reaction mechanism with respect to both catalyst deactivation and product formation in the conversion of methanol to hydrocarbons over zeolite H-ZSM-5. The reactivity of the organics residing in the zeolite voids during the reaction was assessed by transient C-12/C-13 methanol-switching experiments. In contrast to previously investigated catalysts (H-SAPO-34 and H-beta), hexamethylbenzene is virtually unreactive in H-ZSM-5 and is thus not a relevant reaction intermediate for alkene formation. However, the lower methylbenzenes are reaction intermediates in a hydrocarbon pool-type mechanistic cycle and are responsible for the formation of ethene and propene. An additional reaction cycle not applicable for ethene also must be taken into account. The C3+ alkenes are to formed through rapid alkene methylation and cracking steps to a considerable extent; thus, methanol is converted to hydrocarbons according to two catalytic cycles over H-ZSM-5. Moreover, in contrast to what occurs for large-pore zeolites/zeotypes, molecules larger than hexamethyl benzenes are not built up inside the H-ZSM-5 channels during deactivation. Thus, deactivation is explained by coke formation on the external surface of the zeolite crystallites only. This is a plausible rationale for the superior lifetime properties of H-ZSM-5 in the methanol-to-hydrocarbon reaction.

Conversion of methanol to hydrocarbons over zeolite H-ZSM-5: On the origin of the olefinic species

BONINO, Francesca Carla;PALUMBO, LUISA;BORDIGA, Silvia;
2007-01-01

Abstract

This study examined the reaction mechanism with respect to both catalyst deactivation and product formation in the conversion of methanol to hydrocarbons over zeolite H-ZSM-5. The reactivity of the organics residing in the zeolite voids during the reaction was assessed by transient C-12/C-13 methanol-switching experiments. In contrast to previously investigated catalysts (H-SAPO-34 and H-beta), hexamethylbenzene is virtually unreactive in H-ZSM-5 and is thus not a relevant reaction intermediate for alkene formation. However, the lower methylbenzenes are reaction intermediates in a hydrocarbon pool-type mechanistic cycle and are responsible for the formation of ethene and propene. An additional reaction cycle not applicable for ethene also must be taken into account. The C3+ alkenes are to formed through rapid alkene methylation and cracking steps to a considerable extent; thus, methanol is converted to hydrocarbons according to two catalytic cycles over H-ZSM-5. Moreover, in contrast to what occurs for large-pore zeolites/zeotypes, molecules larger than hexamethyl benzenes are not built up inside the H-ZSM-5 channels during deactivation. Thus, deactivation is explained by coke formation on the external surface of the zeolite crystallites only. This is a plausible rationale for the superior lifetime properties of H-ZSM-5 in the methanol-to-hydrocarbon reaction.
2007
249(2)
195
207
http://scienceserver.cilea.it/cgi-bin/sciserv.pl?collection=journals&issn=00219517&volume=249&issue=2&firstpage=195&form=html
ZSM-5; MFI; MTO; MTH; MTG; methanol; zeolite; mechanism; hydrocarbon pool; coking; deactivation
M. BJORGEN; S. SVELLE; F. JOENSEN; J. NERLOV; S. KOLBOE; F. BONINO; L. PALUMBO; S. BORDIGA; U. OLSBYE
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2318/27547
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