EFFECT OF GAS-PHASE ALKALI ON TAR REFORMING CATALYST

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EFFECT OF GAS-PHASE ALKALI ON TAR REFORMING CATALYST Pouya Haghighi Moud 1) , Klas Engvall 1) and Klas J. Andersson 2) 1) Dept. of Chemical Engineering and Technology, KTH, Stockholm Sweden 2) Haldor Topsøe A/S, Kongens Lyngby, Denmark

Transcript of EFFECT OF GAS-PHASE ALKALI ON TAR REFORMING CATALYST

Page 1: EFFECT OF GAS-PHASE ALKALI ON TAR REFORMING CATALYST

EFFECT OF GAS-PHASE ALKALI ON TAR REFORMING CATALYST Pouya Haghighi Moud1), Klas Engvall1) and Klas J. Andersson2) 1) Dept. of Chemical Engineering and Technology, KTH, Stockholm Sweden

2) Haldor Topsøe A/S, Kongens Lyngby, Denmark

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CHALLENGE

Investigations of interactions between tar reforming catalyst and gas phase alkali at realistic conditions

Unknown effects of gas phase alkali on tar reforming catalyst

OBJECTIVE

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Outline

• Background • Experimental • Results so far

– Gas composition – Tar measurements – Sulfur uptake – Chemical eq calculation – K adsorption

• Summary • On-going work

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Tar removal

Reforming of the syngas/Catalysis

Gas utilization

Gas clean-up & reforming

Gasification Preprocessing of biomass

Gasifier

Tar removal

Gas clean-up

Downstream cleaning (Tar, particulates,alkali, S, etc)

Gasifying agent

Biomass

Syngas Tar

Application

Background

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Gasifier Tar reformer Hot gas filter

High temperature hot gas filter

Gasifier Tar reformer

”Clean” tar reforming

Gasifier Tar reformer Hot gas filter

”Dusty” tar reforming

Background

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Background

Alkali promotion* • Surface carbon gasification • Decrease in intrinsic activity of the nickel in

traditional steam reforming • Type of support influences the alkali interaction

6 *Ref: Concepts in Syngas Manufacture, Jens Rostrup-Nielsen Lars J.Christiansen

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Background

Deactivation of the catalyst

• Fouling/coking

• Sintering* – Temperature, pH2O, and pH2 (mobile Ni(OH)2 species)

• Activity suppression by sulfur* – Under reforming conditions all the sulfur compounds are converted

into H2S – H2S+ Me-> Me-S + H2

– Stable saturation uptakes of sulfur 10x10-6 < H2S/H2 < 1000x10-6

– Metal (Ni) surface area/g catalyst => surface saturation by S

7 *Ref: Concepts in Syngas Manufacture, Jens Rostrup-Nielsen Lars J.Christiansen

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EXPERIMENTAL

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Experimental Setup

Dry alkali salt particles

(A) (A) (A)

Gas pre-heater

Product gas

Excess gas

N2

O2 H2

Gas analysis

Atmospheric fluidized bed

Filter vessel

Catalytic reactor

N2

Biomass feeder

(A) Gas analysis - Permanent gases - Tar -others

850 °C 850 °C 850 °C

Ni-based Haldor Topsøe catalyst

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Experimental Setup

Dry alkali salt particles

(A) (A) (A)

Gas pre-heater

Product gas

Excess gas

N2

O2 H2

Gas analysis

Atmospheric fluidized bed

Filter vessel

Catalytic reactor

N2

Biomass feeder

(A) Gas analysis - Permanent gases - Tar -others

850 °C 850 °C 850 °C

Ni-based Haldor Topsøe catalyst

Alkali and hydrogen sulfide is added after the filter. 10

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Experimental Tests

Test campaign 1st test campaign 2nd test campaign

Alkali species KCl, KNO3 KCl

Addition of H2S No addition 50-100 ppm

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Catalyst characterization

• Surface area of catalyst (BET) • K content (AAS) • Carbon/coke formation (TPR) • Cl content(IC) • S and C content (FTIR, SEM) • Particle size distribution (SMPS)

AAS – Atomic Absorption Spectroscopy FTIR – Fourier Tranform Infrared Spectroscopy TPR – Temperature Programmed Desorption SEM – Scanning Electron Miccroscopy IC – ION Chromatography SMPS – Scanning Mobility Particle Sizer

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RESULTS

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Gas composition

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 450 500

Met

han

e co

nte

nt

(%)

Time (minute)

Methane (KCl)

Significant decrease in methane conversion already after one hour 14

KCl 1 ppm H2S ≈10 ppm

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Gas composition

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 450 500

Met

han

e co

nte

nt

(%)

Time (minute)

Methane (KCl+hydogen sulfide) Methane (KCl)

KCl 1 ppm H2S 50 ppm

At extended exposure time, higher H2S addition results in lower methane conversion

KCl 1 ppm H2S ≈ 10 ppm

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Gas composition

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1

2

3

4

5

6

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8

9

10

0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 450 500

Met

han

e co

nte

nt

(%)

Time (minute)

Methane (KCl+hydogen sulfide) Methane (KCl)

KCl 1 ppm H2S 50 ppm

At extended exposure time, higher H2S addition results in lower methane conversion

KCl 1 ppm H2S ≈ 10 ppm

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Tar measurement SPA method and online GC

0

10

20

30

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50

60

70

80

90

2 4 6

Tar

Red

uct

ion

(%

)

Time (hour)

Tar (Excluding Benzene) Naphthalene

KCl 1 ppm H2S 50 ppm

• Decrease in tar reduction for both light and heavy hydrocarbons • A trend is observed: Initial activation drop

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Sulfur effect

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0,4

0,6

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1

1,2

2 4 6

S/

S c

apac

ity

Time on stream(hour)

S content

• Increase in S content of the catalyst: Initial activation drop • Higher H2S addition: S saturation coverage is more rapidly reached

KCl 1 ppm H2S ≈ 10 ppm

KCl 1 ppm H2S 50 ppm

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K adsorption

0

0,05

0,1

0,15

0,2

0,25

0,3

0

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2

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10

0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 450 500

K a

dso

rpti

on

on

cat

alys

t(m

g K

/ g

C

atal

yst)

Met

han

e co

nte

nt

(%)

Time (minute)

Methane (KCl+H2S) Methane (KCl) K adsoption on catalyst

Comparing S and K uptake, initial activity suppression is dominated by S. Therefore important to perform experiments with S coverage equilibrated Ni surface.

KCl 1 ppm H2S 50 ppm

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Summary so far

There is a trend in gas composition/tar reduction behavior After first hours of run

• Methane conversion is stable (constant catalytic activity) • S content of the catalyst reaches its maximum meaning the surface

is equilibrated

How do we isolate the effect of gas phase alkali on the catalyst in realistic conditions?

• Pre-sulfidation • Ageing (High T and high steam content)

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Tests

Test campaigns 3rd test campaign

Alkali species KCl (0.1, 0.5, and 1 ppm)

Addition of sulfur H2S/H2 corresponding to surface coverage of 0.9

Pre-treatment Pre-ageing and Pre-sulfidation

Results of pre-treatment indicates: 1. BET surface area is constant from start 2. Sulfur content of the catalyst is constant from start

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Thermodynamic consideration Chemical eq. calculations* for KCl

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0,1

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0,3

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0,5

0,6

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0,9

1

reference 0.5 ppm KCl 1 ppm KCl

pp

m (

85

0 °

C) KCL

KOHKK2CO3KCN

KCl

At current conditions of experiment,molecular KCl is the main alkali compound present in the gas phase at different concentrations *NASA computer program

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Experimental K adsorption data

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0.5 ppm excess KCl

1 ppm excess KCl

K a

dso

rpti

on (

µg

/BET

su

rfac

e ar

ea)

Time on stream (hour)

Experimental value

4 2

2

5

10

20

15

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Future work

6 10

0.1 ppm KCl

0.5 ppm excess KCl

1 ppm excess KCl

No excess KCl

K a

dso

rpti

on (

µg

/BET

su

rfac

e ar

ea)

Time on stream (hour) Decay time for adsorbed KCl

Experimental value Speculated value

4 2

2

5

10

20

15

• Following the uptake of K at different concentrations, it is possible to observe if the catalyst reaches an equilibrium coverage.

• More data points are needed.

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Summary

• Pre-ageing and pre-sulfidation : isolate the effect of gas phase alkali on tar reforming catalyst

• Initial uptake of K is different at different gas phase concentrations of KCl

• Following the uptake of K at different concentrations, it is possible to see if the catalyst reaches an equilibrium coverage.

• As the result of the objective of this project, we were able to develop a methodology for investigation of gas phase alkali on tar reforming catalyst

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On going work

Extended test plan • Longer exposure times • Different KCl concentrations • Decay time of adsorbed K

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Acknowledgment

SFC

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