Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1757159 Journal of Natural Gas Science and Engineering 2016 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Temperature-programmed reaction was applied to propane dehydrogenation (PHD).•Kinetic parameters were obtained by nonlinear regression of conversion-time data.•Activation energy of PDH (72 kJ/mol) is larger that of catalyst decay (21 kJ/mol).•Simulated temperature-time profile for constant conversion shows upward curvature.•Temperature-time trajectory would not be economically optimal in commercial PDH.

The kinetics of propane dehydrogenation and catalyst deactivation over Pt–Sn/Al2O3 catalyst was studied by temperature-programmed reaction. Catalytic runs were performed in a fixed-bed quartz micro-reactor both under constant (620 °C) and rising temperature. The reaction temperature was increased from 600 to 650 °C in such a way that the propane conversion remained the same with time over the deactivating catalyst. A model based on single reversible main reaction and first-order concentration-independent deactivation was used. The model was solved and optimized numerically to obtain the kinetic parameters of the main reaction and catalyst deactivation. Activation energies of 72 and 21 kJ/mol were obtained for the main reaction and catalyst deactivation, respectively. Within 150 h-on-stream, both temperature histories showed the same propylene yield, however the constant temperature operation gave this yield at lower propane consumption. The simulated temperature-time profiles for constant propane conversion showed an upward curvature (that is, accelerating type).

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