Abstract

Hierarchical porous ceramic catalyst carriers, which exhibit good catalytic performance, are widely used in the petrochemical industry. However, the fabrication of ceramic carriers with hierarchically porous structures is highly challenging for conventional preparation processes. Thus, a strategy for designing and manufacturing hierarchically porous alumina ceramic catalyst carriers using aluminium trihydrate as raw material and powder bed fusion (PBF) as the forming process is proposed herein. PBF process parameters were optimised to define the processing window for creating ceramics with complex structures. Controllable pore characteristics in nano- and microscales has been achieved by combining dehydroxylation, PBF, and post-sintering processes. The effects of raw material composition and process parameters on crush strength, porosity, and specific surface area were systematically investigated. The resulting porous ceramics exhibit a crush strength of 86.03 ± 18.10 N/cm, specific surface area of 1.958 ± 0.123 m2/g, and porosity of 64.85 ± 1.15% with a multipeak distribution at 95 ± 1.23 nm and 17.76 ± 0.14 μm. The possibility of complicated monolithic catalyst carrier structures with bionic leaf vein characters has been validated for potential industrial applications.

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