Abstract

Ni-char catalyst doped with different additives was used to catalytically upgrade coal pyrolysis tar in situ generated in a laboratory-scale dual-stage reactor. The additives including Fe, Mg, Ce, Zr were all beneficial to the catalytic activity for tar cracking. The best result of tar upgrading was achieved with Ce–Ni-char at a Ce-to-Ni molar ratio of 0.4. The upgrading test at 500 °C over a layer of such a catalyst (20% of the tested coal mass) increased the light tar (boiling point <360 °C) yield by 10.1%, and the light tar fraction in the tar product to 75 wt % from 52 wt %. The corresponding increase in the molar ratio of H to C of the tar was 61.7%. About 60% of the pitch in the original tar from coal pyrolysis was cracked in the catalytic upgrading. The contents of element N and S in the tar after catalytic cracking decreased by 50.5% and 45.8%, respectively. NH3 temperature-programmed desorption results revealed that there were weak Lewis and strong Bronsted acidic sites on the Ni-char catalyst, b...

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call