Catalytic deoxygenation of bio-oils using methane
10023809 ยท 2018-07-17
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
C10G3/47
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Y02P30/20
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
International classification
B01J23/64
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
This disclosure provides a new approach for bio-oil upgrading using methane as reductant instead of hydrogen. Guaiacol, produced by thermal degradation of lignin, represents a model compound for upgrading of fast pyrolysis bio-oils by deoxygenation. To overcome the high cost of H.sub.2, methane is used to deoxygenate guaiacol. On Pt/C catalyst, in terms of guaiacol conversion and product distribution, methane is found to exhibit comparable deoxygenation performance as H.sub.2. Its lifetime, however, is lower (<3 hrs). In one embodiment, the lifetime of PtBi/C catalyst is extended by addition of bismuth as a promoter.
Claims
1. A method for deoxygenating a bio-oil, comprising using methane and a catalyst to deoxygenate the bio-oil, wherein the catalyst is a PtBi/C bimetallic catalyst.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(7) For the purposes of promoting an understanding of the principles of the present disclosure, reference will now be made to the embodiments illustrated in the drawings, and specific language will be used to describe the same. It will nevertheless be understood that no limitation of the scope of this disclosure is thereby intended.
(8) Hydrodeoxygenation (HDO) is a promising strategy to overcome problems associated with biomass to biofuel conversion. Since bio-oil is a complex mixture, of generally more than 400 chemical species, a model compound is typically used to obtain insight into the HDO process. Guaiacol is one such representative compound owing to its two common oxygenated groups: hydroxyl and methoxyl. Extensive research has been conducted in this field. It should therefore be appreciated that while guaiacol is the model compound used to demonstrate the methods disclosed herein, such use is not intended to be limiting and rather, other biomass compounds can be used. In general, Group VIII metals (Pt, Pd, Ni, Rh, Ru, and so on) are used to activate guaiacol and to facilitate hydrogen donation, while Al.sub.2O.sub.3, ZrO.sub.2, SiO.sub.2 and activated carbon are considered to be effective supports.
(9) Although the use of hydrogen for deoxygenation of guaiacol is advantageous because it generates clean products (mainly water), it often carries high economic penalties arising from its production and transportation. In this context, methane, as the main component in natural gas (CH.sub.4>95%) and major component of shale gas (typically CH.sub.4>70%), is attractive as an alternative to H.sub.2 since it can serve as a hydrogen donor by releasing hydrogen at high temperature on noble metal surfaces, which makes it a potential promising reductant.
(10) To facilitate understanding of the methods disclosed herein, with Pt/C as catalyst, a guaiacol deoxygenation process using H.sub.2 is presented herein. Based on kinetics and catalyst characterization, deactivation mechanism and reaction pathways are also proposed. To overcome the high cost of H.sub.2, methane is used in the present disclosure to deoxygenate guaiacol.
(11) Results and Discussion:
(12) In preliminary work with Pt/C catalyst, the use of CH.sub.4 was shown to be successful for guaiacol deoxygenation, but significant catalyst deactivation was observed. This observation is similar to other works for CH.sub.4 reactions and is related to coking/carbon deposition. The deactivation issue has been addressed for other reactions by use of bimetallic catalysts, containing a primary metal and a promoter. Thus, in the present disclosure, a guaiacol deoxygenation process using methane is developed via PtBi catalyst.
(13) Four cases (PtH.sub.2, PtCH.sub.4, PtBiH.sub.2 and PtBiCH.sub.4), derived from two catalysts (Pt/C, PtBi/C) using either H.sub.2 or CH.sub.4 as reductant, were tested for deoxygenation of guaiacol under standard operating conditions: 300 C., 1 atm, 0.50 g catalyst, total gas (reductant gas, H.sub.2 or CH.sub.4:N.sub.2=1:1) flow rate 100 mL/min, and guaiacol feed rate 0.025 mL/min (liquid, at room temperature), corresponding to contact time 0.3 g catalyst.Math.hr/g guaiacol. A Van Krevelen diagram (
(14) In the PtBiH.sub.2 case of
(15)
For hydrogen deoxygenation: R.sub.2O+2H.sub.2.fwdarw.2RH+H.sub.2O
For methane deoxygenation: R.sub.2O+4CH.sub.4.fwdarw.2RH+2C.sub.2H.sub.6+H.sub.2O
(16) It is disclosed that CH.sub.4 decomposes on Pt surface and contributes one H atom for guaiacol deoxygenation and water formation, similar to the H.sub.2 process, while the residual methyl combines with another methyl to form ethane. This assumption is supported by the low reaction barrier of CH.sub.4 decomposition at elevated temperature, along with detected H.sub.2 and C.sub.2H.sub.6 molecules in our experiments.
(17) To further understand PtBi performance for guaiacol deoxygenation using CH.sub.4 as reductant, different temperatures (300-450 C.) were investigated for guaiacol conversion and carbon recovery in liquid and gaseous products, as shown in
(18) The kinetic behavior of PtBi catalyst at 400 C. was studied by varying feed rates of guaiacol and CH.sub.4 under otherwise standard conditions. The data for each contact time, taken at 60 min TOS, is shown in
(19) In the present work, CH.sub.4 is used as novel reductant to deoxygenate guaiacol, a model compound of pyrolysis bio-oils. With the Pt/C catalyst, CH.sub.4 exhibits as good deoxygenation performance as H.sub.2 with respect to guaiacol conversion and product distribution. The lifetime of Pt/C catalyst, however, was low (<3 hrs). With addition of bismuth as promoter, the lifetime of PtBi/C is extended (no significant deactivation in 5 hrs), although catalyst performance decreases somewhat, which could be compensated by either higher reaction temperature or longer contact time. The current work provides a new approach for bio-oil upgrading using methane as reductant instead of hydrogen.
(20) Those skilled in the art will recognize that numerous modifications can be made to the specific implementations described above. The implementations should not be limited to the particular limitations described. Other implementations may be possible.
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