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Article Dans Une Revue Applied Catalysis A : General Année : 2008

Continuous hydrogen production by sequential catalytic cracking of acetic acid. Part II. Mechanistic features and characterisation of catalysts under redox cycling

Résumé

In this study, the mechanism of sequential cracking of acetic acid (AA) over Ni-based catalysts was investigated. During AA cracking, both thermal and catalytic reactions take place. Acetic acid is thermally decomposed into CH4, CO, CO2 and H-2, which further react on Ni through WGS and steam reforming reactions, whereas some coke accumulates on the catalyst. The statistical distribution of labelled C*O-2 species suggests fast isotopic exchange between CO2 and surface carbonates. During the regeneration, the coke deposited during cracking is fully burnt, and carbonates are thermally decomposed. O-18(2) isotopic labelling experiments coupled with physico-chemical characterisations of catalysts, after cracking and regeneration steps, reveal that the nickel is reduced by cracking products at the beginning of each cracking step, and oxidized during the regeneration. This redox cycling progressively extracts metallic Ni, initially present as Ni2+ species incorporated in spinel-type structures. (c) 2007 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Domaines

Catalyse

Dates et versions

hal-00474592 , version 1 (20-04-2010)

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Citer

T. Davidian, N. Guilhaume, H. Provendier, C. Mirodatos. Continuous hydrogen production by sequential catalytic cracking of acetic acid. Part II. Mechanistic features and characterisation of catalysts under redox cycling. Applied Catalysis A : General, 2008, 337 (2), pp.111-120. ⟨10.1016/j.apcata.2007.11.034⟩. ⟨hal-00474592⟩
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