Single-Step Conversion of H 2 -Deficient Syngas into High Yield of Tetramethylbenzene

Muhammad Tahir Arslan, Babar Ali Qureshi, S. Z.Ali Gilani, Dali Cai, Yunhai Ma, Muhammad Usman, Xiao Chen, Yao Wang, Fei Wei*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

105 Scopus citations

Abstract

Controlling the selectivity in single-step conversion of syngas to single aromatic hydrocarbon to enhance CO utilization is a big challenge. By adapting the reaction coupling methodology, which allows the precise control of C-C coupling reaction, we obtained a high selectivity of ∼70% of a single product, tetramethylbenzene (TeMB), in hydrocarbons, at total CO conversion of 37%. This was enabled by the reaction of H 2 -deficient syngas over a composite catalyst of physically mixed nanosized ZnCr 2 O 4 and H-ZSM-5. The H-ZSM-5 employed in this work appeared as a coffin shape with short straight channels [010] along the b-axis that exhibit low molecular-diffusion resistance, resulting in high selectivity of aromatics, particularly TeMB. Due to selective methanol formation and enhanced molecular diffusion, we observed an aromatic vacancy created inside H-ZSM-5 pores, which boosts the transformation of olefins into aromatics, thus making the aromatic cycle dominant in a dual-cycle mechanism and giving a high yield of aromatics and TeMB. Furthermore, no catalyst deactivation was observed within 600 h of reaction time using H 2 -deficient syngas. Therefore, by rejecting the need for extra H 2 addition into the syngas-to-aromatics (STA) reaction system, direct conversion of H 2 -deficient syngas derived from coal/biomass into TeMB makes an attractive industrial process.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2203-2212
Number of pages10
JournalACS Catalysis
Volume9
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Mar 2019
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 American Chemical Society.

Keywords

  • H-ZSM-5
  • ZnCr O
  • aromatics
  • stability
  • syngas
  • tetramethylbenzene

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Catalysis
  • General Chemistry

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