Abstract
Propane (C3H8) and butane (C4H10) are short straight-chain alkane molecules that are difficult to convert catalytically. Analogous to propane, butane can be dehydrogenated to butenes (also known as butylenes) or butadiene, which are used industrially as raw materials when synthesizing various chemicals (plastics, rubbers, etc.). In this study, we present results of detailed first-principles-based multiscale modelling of butane dehydrogenation, consisting of three size- and time-scales. The reaction is modelled over Cr2O3(0001) chromium oxide, which is commonly used in the industrial setting. A complete 108-step reaction pathway of butane (C4H10) dehydrogenation was studied, yielding 1-butene (CH2CHCH2CH3) and 2-butene (CH3CHCHCH3), 1-butyne (CHCCH2CH3) and 2-butyne (CH3CCCH3), butadiene (CH2CHCHCH2), butenyne (CH2CHCCH), and ultimately butadiyne (CHCCCH). We include cracking and coking reactions (yielding C1, C2, and C3 hydrocarbons) in the model to provide a thorough description of catalyst deactivation as a function of the temperature and time. Density functional theory calculations with the Hubbard U model were used to study the reaction on the atomistic scale, resulting in the complete energetics and first-principles kinetic parameters for the dehydrogenation reaction. They were cast in a kinetic model using mean-field microkinetics and kinetic Monte Carlo simulations. The former was used to obtain gas equilibrium conditions in the steady-state regime, which were fed in the latter to provide accurate surface kinetics. A full reactor simulation was used to account for the macroscopic properties of the catalytic particles: their loading, specific surface area, and density and reactor parameters: size, design, and feed gas flow. With this approach, we obtained first-principles estimates of the catalytic conversion, selectivity to products, and time dependence of the catalyst activity, which can be paralleled to experimental data. We show that 2-butene is the most abundant product of dehydrogenation, with selectivity above 90% and turn-over frequency above 10–3 s–1 at T = 900 K. Butane conversion is below 5% at such low temperature, but rises above 40% at T > 1100 K. Activity starts to drop after ∼6 h because of surface poisoning with carbon. We conclude that the dehydrogenation of butane is a viable alternative to conventional olefin production processes.
Highlights
The demand for light alkenes is steadily increasing with butene showing a linear growth trend projected to the year of 2022.1Because of its importance in the petrochemical industry for the production of gasoline and fuel additives, butane dehydrogenation is an important chemical reaction, warranting the development of improved catalysts
■ RESULTS AND DISCUSSION Reaction Mechanism. Saturated hydrocarbons such as propane and butane are notable for their inertness and low interaction with the surface
In modelling butane dehydrogenation to all possible dehydrogenation products and taking cracking into account, we identify 108 reactions in the reaction mechanism
Summary
The demand for light alkenes is steadily increasing with butene showing a linear growth trend projected to the year of 2022.1Because of its importance in the petrochemical industry for the production of gasoline and fuel additives, butane dehydrogenation is an important chemical reaction, warranting the development of improved catalysts. Butylene and butadiene, which for instance are used in the production of synthetic rubbers, are continually in high demand. Their growing price requires the “on-purpose” technologies to be investigated.[2] butadiene is an important bulk chemical in the synthesis of elastomers and polymer resins,[3] which was until now predominantly extracted from refinery waste gas and natural gas condensates.[4]. While steam cracking has been used abundantly for the production of alkenes, the capacity cannot keep up with the growing demand, prompting catalytic dehydrogenation to be increasingly investigated and employed. The CATOFIN and CATADIENE technologies have been used successfully for the production of propylene/iso-butylene and butadiene through dehydrogenation.
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