INVESTIGADORES
MAZZIERI Vanina Alejandra
artículos
Título:
Pt-Re-Sn/Al2O3 trimetallic catalysts for naphtha reforming
Autor/es:
V.A. MAZZIERI, J.M. GRAU, C.R. VERA, J.C. YORI, J.M. PARERA , C.L. PIECK
Revista:
APPLIED CATALYSIS A-GENERAL
Editorial:
Elsevier
Referencias:
Lugar: P.O. Box 211, 1000 AE Amsterdam The Netherlands; Año: 2005 vol. 296 p. 216 - 221
ISSN:
0926-860X
Resumen:
The sulfided 0.3Pt-0.3Re catalyst (with 0.06% S) was found to be the best performing bimetallic one. It had a great stability, typical of this kind of catalysts, and also produced a reformate with a high iso-heptanes/toluene ratio. This is advantageous for fulfilling the current environmental regulations that limit the amount of aromatic hydrocarbons in reformulated gasolines. The best trimetallic catalyst was 0.3Pt-0.3Re-0.6Sn which had a similar activity and selectivity as sulfided 0.3Pt-0.3Re, though it displayed a higher stability and a lower hydrogenolysis activity, without the need of presulfidation. Tin affected the metal and acid functions of the catalyst simultaneously and inhibited them to such different degrees that a very convenient metal/acid activity ratio was obtained, resulting in an improvement of the activity, selectivity and stability of the catalysts. It can be concluded that it is possible to prepare trimetallic naphtha reforming catalysts of the Pt-Re-Sn kind with a better performance than conventional sulfided Pt-Re catalysts and with the additional advantage that they do not need complicated sulfiding pretreatments. This simplifies the commercial operation of the reformer unit and enables the application of this catalyst to continuously operated processes. regulations that limit the amount of aromatic hydrocarbons in reformulated gasolines. The best trimetallic catalyst was 0.3Pt-0.3Re-0.6Sn which had a similar activity and selectivity as sulfided 0.3Pt-0.3Re, though it displayed a higher stability and a lower hydrogenolysis activity, without the need of presulfidation. Tin affected the metal and acid functions of the catalyst simultaneously and inhibited them to such different degrees that a very convenient metal/acid activity ratio was obtained, resulting in an improvement of the activity, selectivity and stability of the catalysts. It can be concluded that it is possible to prepare trimetallic naphtha reforming catalysts of the Pt-Re-Sn kind with a better performance than conventional sulfided Pt-Re catalysts and with the additional advantage that they do not need complicated sulfiding pretreatments. This simplifies the commercial operation of the reformer unit and enables the application of this catalyst to continuously operated processes. regulations that limit the amount of aromatic hydrocarbons in reformulated gasolines. The best trimetallic catalyst was 0.3Pt-0.3Re-0.6Sn which had a similar activity and selectivity as sulfided 0.3Pt-0.3Re, though it displayed a higher stability and a lower hydrogenolysis activity, without the need of presulfidation. Tin affected the metal and acid functions of the catalyst simultaneously and inhibited them to such different degrees that a very convenient metal/acid activity ratio was obtained, resulting in an improvement of the activity, selectivity and stability of the catalysts. It can be concluded that it is possible to prepare trimetallic naphtha reforming catalysts of the Pt-Re-Sn kind with a better performance than conventional sulfided Pt-Re catalysts and with the additional advantage that they do not need complicated sulfiding pretreatments. This simplifies the commercial operation of the reformer unit and enables the application of this catalyst to continuously operated processes. regulations that limit the amount of aromatic hydrocarbons in reformulated gasolines. The best trimetallic catalyst was 0.3Pt-0.3Re-0.6Sn which had a similar activity and selectivity as sulfided 0.3Pt-0.3Re, though it displayed a higher stability and a lower hydrogenolysis activity, without the need of presulfidation. Tin affected the metal and acid functions of the catalyst simultaneously and inhibited them to such different degrees that a very convenient metal/acid activity ratio was obtained, resulting in an improvement of the activity, selectivity and stability of the catalysts. It can be concluded that it is possible to prepare trimetallic naphtha reforming catalysts of the Pt-Re-Sn kind with a better performance than conventional sulfided Pt-Re catalysts and with the additional advantage that they do not need complicated sulfiding pretreatments. This simplifies the commercial operation of the reformer unit and enables the application of this catalyst to continuously operated processes. regulations that limit the amount of aromatic hydrocarbons in reformulated gasolines. The best trimetallic catalyst was 0.3Pt-0.3Re-0.6Sn which had a similar activity and selectivity as sulfided 0.3Pt-0.3Re, though it displayed a higher stability and a lower hydrogenolysis activity, without the need of presulfidation. Tin affected the metal and acid functions of the catalyst simultaneously and inhibited them to such different degrees that a very convenient metal/acid activity ratio was obtained, resulting in an improvement of the activity, selectivity and stability of the catalysts. It can be concluded that it is possible to prepare trimetallic naphtha reforming catalysts of the Pt-Re-Sn kind with a better performance than conventional sulfided Pt-Re catalysts and with the additional advantage that they do not need complicated sulfiding pretreatments. This simplifies the commercial operation of the reformer unit and enables the application of this catalyst to continuously operated processes. iso-heptanes/toluene ratio. This is advantageous for fulfilling the current environmental regulations that limit the amount of aromatic hydrocarbons in reformulated gasolines. The best trimetallic catalyst was 0.3Pt-0.3Re-0.6Sn which had a similar activity and selectivity as sulfided 0.3Pt-0.3Re, though it displayed a higher stability and a lower hydrogenolysis activity, without the need of presulfidation. Tin affected the metal and acid functions of the catalyst simultaneously and inhibited them to such different degrees that a very convenient metal/acid activity ratio was obtained, resulting in an improvement of the activity, selectivity and stability of the catalysts. It can be concluded that it is possible to prepare trimetallic naphtha reforming catalysts of the Pt-Re-Sn kind with a better performance than conventional sulfided Pt-Re catalysts and with the additional advantage that they do not need complicated sulfiding pretreatments. This simplifies the commercial operation of the reformer unit and enables the application of this catalyst to continuously operated processes.