1. Investigation of competitive COS and HCN hydrolysis reactions upon an industrial catalyst: Langmuir-Hinshelwood kinetics modeling
- Author
-
David Chiche and Jean-Marc Schweitzer
- Subjects
Reactions on surfaces ,Reaction mechanism ,Chemistry ,Process Chemistry and Technology ,Diffusion ,Kinetics ,02 engineering and technology ,010501 environmental sciences ,01 natural sciences ,Catalysis ,Chemical kinetics ,Adsorption ,020401 chemical engineering ,Computational chemistry ,Organic chemistry ,0204 chemical engineering ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,General Environmental Science ,Syngas - Abstract
Distinct and simultaneous COS and HCN hydrolysis reactions over an industrial TiO 2 based catalyst were extensively studied in this work in the scope of synthesis gas purification applications. 144 experiments were carried out, including 92 experiments that allowed to achieve partial conversion rates and showed reaction kinetics sensitivity to operating parameters. Significant crossed influences were evidenced between both COS and HCN hydrolysis reactions. The concomitant occurrence of both reactions showed to detrimentally affect each other upon COS and HCN conversion rates, and therefore upon kinetic rates. This was explained through a competitive adsorption of HCN and COS reactants upon catalyst surface active sites. Inhibition of catalytic activity by the presence of NH 3 and H 2 O was also evidenced and explained through competitive adsorption phenomena. For the operating conditions ranges explored, H 2 S and CO 2 had no sensitive impact on the kinetics of the COS and HCN hydrolysis reactions. However, the moderate impact of CO 2 upon COS and HCN conversion rates might be explained by the large CO 2 excess compared to COS and HCN levels. A reaction model has been fully developed considering hydrodynamic, external mass transfer and intra particle diffusion limitations, and Langmuir-Hinshelwood reaction mechanisms for both COS and HCN hydrolysis reactions. Langmuir-Hinshelwood kinetic rate laws were indeed considered to account for the detrimental effect of gaseous species upon COS and HCN conversion kinetic rates, through competitive adsorption upon catalyst active sites of COS, HCN, H 2 O, and NH 3 . Collected kinetic data as a function of reactor size, gas residence time, temperature and reactants partial pressures were used to validate and fit kinetic and adsorption constants. Very good agreement was achieved between experimental and calculated COS and HCN conversion rates from the model developed, that allowed complete validation of the Langmuir-Hinshelwood based modeling. The coupled hydrodynamic-reaction model also constitutes a complete industrial reactor model taking into account all the potential limitations, and can be used as a powerful predicting tool for industrial process design, i.e. fully usable for industrial process scale-up and optimization purposes.
- Published
- 2017