Loading…

Direct amination of 1-octanol with NH3 over Ag-Co/Al2O3: Promoting effect of the H2 pressure on the reaction rate

[Display omitted] •The kinetics of 1-octanol amination with ammonia over Ag-Co/Al2O3 was studied.•Alcohol dehydrogenation was found to be the rate-determining step.•A positive effect of the H2 pressure on the 1-octanol conversion was observed.•A kinetic model was built relying on a deactivation-rege...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Chemical engineering journal (Lausanne, Switzerland : 1996) Switzerland : 1996), 2019-02, Vol.358, p.1620-1630
Main Authors: Ibáñez, J., Araque-Marin, M., Paul, S., Pera-Titus, M.
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:[Display omitted] •The kinetics of 1-octanol amination with ammonia over Ag-Co/Al2O3 was studied.•Alcohol dehydrogenation was found to be the rate-determining step.•A positive effect of the H2 pressure on the 1-octanol conversion was observed.•A kinetic model was built relying on a deactivation-regeneration mechanism.•The model predicted the experimental trends at low and high conversions. The kinetics of the direct gas-phase amination reaction of 1-octanol with ammonia was studied over a Ag-Co/Al2O3 catalyst. An exhaustive experimental dataset was acquired on a Flowrence unit using a full factorial experimental design, covering the effect and interactions of the 1-octanol, ammonia and hydrogen partial pressures in the range 160–180 °C. An apparent zero order was obtained for both reactants (i.e. 1-octanol and NH3), addressing alcohol dehydrogenation as the rate-determining step of the overall catalytic process. Most interestingly, a non-trivial positive effect of the exogeneous H2 pressure was observed on the 1-octanol conversion, also favoring the formation of the secondary amine. To unveil the promoting role of H2 on the reaction rate, a comprehensive kinetic modeling study was carried out. Based on the observed experimental trends, various kinetic models were proposed relying on an in situ catalytic deactivation-regeneration mechanism of the catalyst surface. Upon statistical discrimination, a robust kinetic model could be obtained, pointing out the adsorbed octylimine intermediate as the most plausible source of deactivation. The kinetic model afford an excellent description of the observed experimental trends at both low and high 1-octanol conversion and provides a sound mechanistic explanation accounting for the unexpected role of H2 on alcohol amination reactions.
ISSN:1385-8947
1873-3212
DOI:10.1016/j.cej.2018.10.021