Abstract

The production of hydrogen and filamentous carbon by means of methane decomposition was investigated in a fixed-bed reactor using iron-based catalysts. The effect of the textural promoter and the addition of Mo as a dopant affects the catalysts performance substantially: iron catalyst prepared with Al 2O 3 showed slightly higher catalytic performance as compared to those prepared with MgO; Mo addition was found to improve the catalytic performance of the catalyst prepared with MgO, whereas in the catalyst prepared with Al 2O 3 displayed similar or slightly poorer results. Additionally, the influence of the catalyst reduction temperature, the reaction temperature and the space velocity on the hydrogen yield was thoroughly investigated. The study reveals that iron catalysts allow achieving high methane conversions at operating temperatures higher than 800 °C, yielding simultaneously carbon nanofilaments with interesting properties. Thus, at 900 °C reaction temperature and 1 l g −1 cat h −1 space velocity, ca. 93 vol% hydrogen concentration was obtained, which corresponds to a methane conversion of 87%. Additionally, it was found that at temperatures higher than 700 °C, carbon co-product is deposited mainly as multi walled carbon nanotubes. The textural and structural properties of the carbonaceous structures obtained are also presented.

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