Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
155476 | Chemical Engineering Science | 2013 | 9 Pages |
This work aims at filling the gap in vacuum-TPD modeling methodology for microporous samples. The specific objective was to assess and distinguish external and internal mass transfer effects from the intrinsic sorption dynamics during temperature-programmed desorption, as illustrated by ammonia on H-ZSM-5. The external mass transfer pattern was confirmed to be free of bed-depth effects, the intraparticle mass transfer resistance proved to be significant in the ammonia-TPD system, and equipment-related artefacts showed to be negligible based on preliminary experiments. Thus a consistent set of 10 TPD curves was collected, including two adsorption temperatures, three heating rates and two separate particle fractions. The experimental data was successfully modeled with a system including intraparticle mass transfer phenomena and intrinsic sorption kinetics. By combining a transient kinetic approach to a well-designed set of high-quality experiments vacuum-TPD can provide decoupled information on mass transfer and sorption for porous materials as we demonstrate in this work.
Graphical AbstractFigure optionsDownload full-size imageDownload high-quality image (193 K)Download as PowerPoint slideHighlights► TPD is widely used to characterize porous solids; also provides kinetic information. ► Novel modeling methodology is established to describe the vacuum-TPD system. ► TPD modeling results: intraparticle diffusion and adsorption equilibrium parameters. ► Example: NH3-TPD of H-ZSM-5—adsorption and mass transfer parameters are reported.