Abstract

The influence of product shape selectivity on the bifunctional conversion of n-C7 by zeolite catalysts is investigated. Three different zeolite catalysts with different pore sizes (MFI-type, MEL-type, and BEA-type zeolites) have been investigated experimentally. For all three catalysts, n-C7 is isomerized to monobranched isomers which are further isomerized into dibranched isomers, and these dibranched molecules are converted into cracking products. More dibranched isomers and less cracking products are produced by BEA-type zeolite compared to MFI-type and MEL-type zeolites and clear differences are observed in the distribution of dibranched isomers produced by different catalysts. Molecular simulation is used to compute the adsorption isotherms and free energy barriers for diffusion of dibranched isomers in MFI-type, MEL-type, and BEA-type zeolites. Combining simulation results and experimental observations, it is shown that product shape selectivity can explain the distribution of dibranched molecules while transition state shape selectivity fails to do so. For the medium-pore zeolites (MFI-type and MEL-type zeolites), free energy barriers for diffusion of dibranched molecules are significant. For MFI-type and MEL-type zeolites, the dibranched molecule that has to overcome lower diffusion barrier is produced with a higher yield and the distribution of dimethylpentane molecules is determined by their diffusion rate. It is shown that there is almost no free energy barrier for the diffusion of any of these molecules in BEA-type zeolite. As BEA-type zeolite imposes no free energy barrier for diffusion of any of dibranched isomers, the distribution of dibranched isomers is very close to the equilibrium distribution in the gas phase. Due to the limited mobility of dimethylpentanes within the pores of MFI-type and MEL-type zeolites, most of the dimethylpentane molecules are trapped inside the zeolite and undergo consecutive cracking. Dimethylpentane molecules diffuse sufficiently fast in the large pores of BEA-type zeolite and transfer to the gas phase, before consecutive reaction converts these molecules into cracking products. Moreover, the effect of the MFI-type crystal size on the production of dibranched isomers is investigated. The yield of dibranched isomers reduces by increasing the size of the crystal and larger part of dibranched isomers are cracked as the crystal size of MFI-type is increased.

Highlights

  • Zeolites are microporous materials which are extensively used as catalysts and adsorbents in the oil and gas industry since the late 1950s [1,2]

  • Most of the formed dibranched isomers remain inside the zeolite until they are cracked and fast diffusing cracking products are transferred to the gas phase

  • BEA-type zeolite catalyst showed the highest selectivity towards production of dibranched isomers

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Summary

Introduction

Zeolites are microporous materials which are extensively used as catalysts and adsorbents in the oil and gas industry since the late 1950s [1,2]. Poursaeidesfahani et al / Journal of Catalysis 353 (2017) 54–62 is produced through zeolite-catalyzed hydrocracking, with a global capacity of over 500 million tons per annum Another example is catalytic dewaxing of fuels and lubricants, which aims to achieve selective isomerization of alkanes or alkyl chains while minimizing hydrocracking reactions [8]. In these applications, catalytic activity, selectivity, and product quality all critically depend on the pore architectures of the zeolites. It is possible to compute adsorption isotherms, spatial distributions, and free energy landscapes of the reactant and product molecules within the pore network of zeolites [30,1,17] From both scientific and applied perspective, such treatments should eventually aim for quantitative predictions. The results are combined with experimental observations and used to explain trends in the reaction kinetics, as a step towards a full quantitative treatment

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