Title: Solid Catalysts
1Solid Catalysts
What do we need for making a good Catalyst ?
- High activity per unit of volume in the eventual
reactor - High selectivity
- Sufficiently long life time with respect to
deactivation - Possibility to regenerate, particularly if it
deactivates fast - Reproducible preparation
- Sufficient thermal stability against sintering,
structural - changes or volatilization
- High mechanical strength with respect to crushing
(e.g. under - the weight of the catalyst bed or during the
shaping processes) - High attrition resistance (mechanical wear)
- .
2The Structure of Metals and their Surfaces
fcc
bcc
hcp
3Crystal structure
- A metal has a crystal structure and a lattice
constant which minimize the energy
bcc hcp fcc
4Crystal structures in the periodic table
5Surface Crystallography
Surface density fcc, (111)gt100gt110 fcc,
(110)gt100gt111
Stepped surfaces
fcc (755)
6Adsorbate sites
7The two-dimensional lattice
(2x2)S-Ni(100)
S-Ni(100)
8Surface Structures
Clock reconstruction C-Ni(100)
9Alloys
10Oxides and Sulfides
11Oxides and Sulfides
12Sulfides MoS2 (CoMOS)
Sulfur
Molybdenum
Cobalt
13Hydrodesulfurization Catalysis
- Large Environmental Impact
- New Technological Challenges
SO2 emissions from fuels
New S regulations world wide
EU
Catalyst MoCoS
14Mo Deposition on Au(111)
- Mo coverage 10
- High degree of dispersion.
- Self-assembled Mo nanoclusters, size 20-30Å.
- Well-defined nanometer spacing.
500 Å
Helveg, Lauritsen, Lægsgaard, Stensgaard,
Nørskov, Clausen, Topsøe and Besenbacher. Phys.
Rev. Lett. 84, 951 (2000)
4035 x 4090 Å2,, insert 890 x 920 Å2
15Sulfiding Mo on Au(111)
- High degree of dispersion
- MoS2 nanoclusters,size 20-30Å
- Triangular morphology
Good model system for HDS catalysts
Mo deposited in H2S (10-6 mbar), Postannealing to
673K
Helveg, Lauritsen, Lægsgaard, Stensgaard,
Nørskov, Clausen, Topsøe and Besenbacher. Phys.
Rev. Lett. 84, 951 (2000)
807 x 818 Å2
16STM Image of MoS2 Nanocluster
- Triangular shape
- Hexagonal lattice, sulfur atoms
- a3.15 0.05Å
- Single layer (0001) MoS2
41Å ? 42Å
Helveg, Lauritsen, Lægsgaard, Stensgaard,
Nørskov, Clausen, Topsøe and Besenbacher. Phys.
Rev. Lett. 84, 951 (2000)
17Understanding the nanocluster
a) STM image of a triangular MoS2 nanocluster.
b) A cobalt-promoted MoS2 nanocluster
c) DFT calculation
c)
Bollinger, Lauritsen, Jakobsen, Nørskov, Helveg,
Besenbacher Phys. Rev. Lett. 87 196803 (2001)
Metallic state
18Surface Free Energy
- Surfaces are always covered by the component or
structure that - lowers surface free energy of the system.
- Clean, polycrystalline metals expose mostly
their most densely - packed surface.
- Open surfaces such as fcc (110) often
reconstruct to a geometry in - which the number of neighbors of a surface
atom is maximized.
- In alloys, the component with the lower surface
free energy - segregates to the surface.
- Impurities in metals, such as C, O, or S,
segregate to the surface.
- Small metal particles on an oxidic support
sinter at elevated tempe- - ratures because loss of surface area means a
lower total energy.
- In oxidic systems, however, the surface free
energy provides a - driving force for spreading over the
surface if the active phase has a - lower surface free energy than the support.
19Characteristics of Small Particles and Porous
Material
1) The surface energy for each surface (h,k,l)
is plotted in a polar plot so the length of
the vector is proportional to the surface energy.
2) At the end of the vector a surface plane is
defined orthogonal to the vector.
3) The inner envelope of these surfaces defines
the equilibrium shape
20Free particle
g111 1.97 J/m2 g100 2.2 J/m2 g110 2.1 J/m2
- Simulation for free fcc particle with (100) facet
up
21The Wulff construction
is the adhesion energy at the surface
22Overview
(100)
gs
-1.0 0.8 0.0 1.0
Top and contact planes are (100), calculated Cu
energies
23Adsorbed particle
- Simulation for adsorbed fcc particle with (100)
facet up
g111 1.97 J/m2 g100 2.2 J/m2 g110 2.1 J/m2 (no
interaction)
24Examples of particles on surfaces
25Model support Thin Al2O3 film on NiAl
- 5 Å thick film
- Thin enough to allow tunneling
- Thick enough to develop Al2O3 nature, e.g. a band
gap - Structure model
- (111) termination of g -Al2O3
- Oxygen terminated
- Two Al - O sandwich layers
26STM of metals on Al2O3 /AlNi
Evaporate Pd on the Al2O3
A general trend
Metals form clusters preferentially along the
edges
2 ML Pd 650?650 Å2
Besenbacher et al.
27Atomic resolution on Pd nanocrystals on Al2O3
300?300 Å2
28Adhesion energy
Wadh g100 gsubstrat ginterface
The energy per unit area needed to pull the
system into its constituents
29Nanocrystal shape and adhesion energy
30Reversibility of shape changes
Synthesis from H2CO2CO
The methanol catalyst undergoes strong changes by
changes in gas composition
31Dynamical changes in structure of nano
crystalline catalysts
Changes in apparent coordination number
determined with in situ EXAFS Grunwaldt et al.
(2000) Jour. Cat. 194, 452-460
Changes in particle shape with gas
composition. Methanol catalyst Cu/ZnO, In-situ
TEM at Haldor Topsøe A/S Hansen et al.HTAS
(2002), Science 295, 2053-2055
H2 (red.) H2H2O (ox.) H2CO
(red.)
32The pore system
A good support offers
- controlled surface area and porosity
- thermal stability
- high mechanical strength against crushing and
attrition
Micropore pore width ? 2 nm Mesopore pore
width 2 50 nm Zeolittes
33Measuring the surface area
- Dynamic equilibrium between adsorbate and
adsorptive - the rate of adsorption and desorption in any
layer are equal
- In the first layer, molecules adsorb on
equivalent adsorption sites.
- Molecules in the first layer constitute the
adsorption sites for molecules - in the second layer, and so on for higher
layers.
- Adsorbate-adsorbate interactions are ignored
- The adsorption-desorption conditions are the
same for all layers - but the first.
- The adsorption energy for molecules in the 2nd
layer and higher equals - the condensation energy.
- The multilayer grows to infinite thickness at
saturation pressure - (P P0).
34The Surface Area (the BET model)
BET Brunauer, Emmet, Teller.
35BET
The total coverage is then
36BET
should be eliminated
Leading to
37BET
P0 is the equilibrium pressure over multilayer
of the fluid or solid
What is it for N2 at 77K?
38BET
At T75 K the equilibrium pressure for N2 is
P0750 mbar.
We will expres the amount of gas adsorbed Va in
terms of the amount adsorbed in one monolayer V0
Substitute this into the previous expression for
qt
39Example of BET area
V01616ml leading to 32 m2g-1 if we assume
AN216Å2
40Simple BET
41Capillary condensation
42Both Physisorption and Pores
43Supported Catalysts
Good support materials are
Al2O3 MgO SiO2 Carbon
High area and very stable
High area but less stable
Good support materials have areas from 1-200-
1000m2/g
The surface energy of good support materials are
in general low Why are such materials very
brittle? How are high area materials made?
44Catalyst Shaping
Dictated by strength and transport limitations
45Catalyst Preparation
It is an integral part of courses Nanostructured
materials for heterogeneous catalysis
26510 (both synthesis, test, individual
projects) Catalysis, spectroscopy and structure
26330
46Catalysts testing
Idealized plug flow reactor
Is not a simple task due to heat and mass
transport. Just minor errors in temperature can
lead to erroneous results. Is in particular a
problem for strongly exothermic or
endothermic processes Measurements should be
performed in the zero conversion limit and
without transport limitations
47The 10 commandments for testing
- What is the purpose?
- What is the strategy
- What type of reactor PFR or CSTR
- PFR is it ideal?
- Isothermal conditions
- Limit transport effects and gradients
- TOF, selectivity, space velocity i.e. meaningfull
units. Measure activity in the zero conversion
limit. - Stability?
- Reproducibility
- State all experimental details
In the following we shall see what happens if we
for example are not careful about the mass
transportation limitations.
48Thiele diffusion modulus
Ficks 1st and 2. laws of diffusion. Notice D may
be considerably smaller than normal gas diffusion
(Knudsen diffusion).
The reaction rate
We are only interested in steady State solutions
49Thiele diffusion modulus
50Thiele diffusion modulus
The continuum law
51Thiele diffusion modulus
For a first order reaction n1 we get a simple
form
52Thiele diffusion modulus
53Thiele diffusion modulus
54The apparent activation energy
55Optimization of catalysts
The higher the temperature the better (except for
exothermic processes) The lower the catalyst
loading the better (consider the price of Pt)
This gives some guidelines how to design and
operate the catalyst
56Transport limitations
Steady state solution
57Transport limitations
We make a guess
Resulting in the solution
58Transport limitations
We now introduce an efficiency factor rate
with/rate without transport
Limits D,R large and L, k small, transport has
no influence D,R small and L, k
large, transport limitations
59Transport limitations
Typically
This gives some guidelines how to design and
operate the catalyst