Abstract

The dehydrogenation of dodecahydro-N-ethylcarbazole (H12-NEC) generates enormous gas accompanied by intense heat absorption, affecting heat and mass transfer in porous catalysts. A packed-bed reactor equipped with a temperature measurement device was designed to investigate the continuous flow dehydrogenation of H12-NEC. The effects of weight hourly space velocity (WHSV), reaction temperature, catalyst particle size, and pressure were evaluated. The results reveal that the volume flow rate of hydrogen will increase with the increase of WHSV. And the reduction of gas–liquid ratio and catalyst particle size facilitates heat transfer causing a more uniform axial temperature distribution within the reactor. As the temperature rises, the hydrogen yield increases along with more by-products. 456 K and 2 mm of catalyst particle size are determined to be the optimal reaction conditions in the study, achieving the hydrogen production rate of 9.61 molH2·gPd-1·h-1. With pressure increasing, the hydrogen yield gradually decreases, but the decreased evaporation of H12-NEC results in a smaller temperature difference between the reactor and heating wall. A comparison with the thermodynamic equilibrium model reveals that the effect of pressure on chemical equilibrium may be more significant than the temperature.

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