04 - Catalyst Preparation
04 - Catalyst Preparation
04 - Catalyst Preparation
Sergio Rojas
ICP-CSIC
January 2013
1.
2.
3.
1.
PREPARATION METHODS
2.
CONCLUSIONS
Liquids (H2SO4)
90
80
Number of particles
70
60
50
Molecules
that wont
react
because
they lack of
energy
40
30
20
10
Activation Energy
0
0
Energy
10
90
80
Number of particles
70
60
50
Molecules
that wont
react
because
they lack of
energy
40
30
20
10
Activation Energy
0
0
Energy
Extra molecules to react
10
Catalysis in Industry
Heterogeneous
80%
Homogeneous
17%
Biocatalysis
3%
Gas/Liquid phase
(reactants)
Heterogeneous catalysis is a
surface process
1. Adsorption of reactants
2. Reaction
3. Desorption of products
Simplified mechanism
heterogeneous catalysis
Adapted from: G. Mul and J.A. Moulijn. Preparation of supported metal catalysts
Stabilization of particles by
deposition onto supports
Solid support
Irregular
granule
Ring
Pellet
Sphere
Minilith
Wagon wheel
Extruded
cylindrical
Monolith
ceramic
metallic
Spheres
Granules
Pellets
Extrudates
Rings
Monoliths
Gauzes
Micros(nanos)copic scale
< 2 nm
1-2 mm
10 nm
Macroscopic scale
Support particles
20-50 nm
Adapted from: Synthesis of solid catalysts, Ed. K.P. de Jong, 2009, Wiley
The mesoscopic scale the pore system and the sizes of the support
particles as well as catalyst particles of the active phase. It affects
intraparticle mass transfer of the catalyst
The macroscopic length scale involves the size and shape of the catalyst
body. Relevant for properties such as pressure drop, mechanical
strength and attrition resistance
Precursor
Support
Organic or
inorganic
Metal salt or
coordination
complex
Modified
T, P, pH,
templates,
size control
agents
CATALYST
Catalysts preparation
Mixing
solutions/solids
Drying
Equilibration or
aging
Calcination
Solid liquid
separation
activation
Impregnation is related to
ion-exchange / adsorption
processes and the
interaction with the
support is dominant
Precipitation is in principle
a crystallization process
and can occur in the bulk
of the liquid or on a
relatively inert surface. The
support particles act as
crystallization nuclei for the
active site precursor
Zn2+
Cu2+
CuOx
ZnOx
CuO//ZnO
OH-
Liquid mixing
Nucleation rate
nucleation
crystallization
growth rate
Forward precipitation
Adding the base solution to
the acid (metal containing)
solution (pH increases)
pH=8.0
Reverse precipitation
Ce
Fe
343 K
Simultaneous precipitation
Base and acid are added
simultaneously to a base
solution and pH is carefully
controlled
NH4OH
electrically neutral
OH groups or by adsorption
OH
Si O Si O Si
OH
OH
OH2
OH2
OH2
Si O Si O Si
pH<pzc
Si O Si O Si
pH>pzc
pH<ZPC
OH2+
[PtCl6]2-
OH
pH>ZPC
O-
[(NH3)4Pt]2+
Support
PZC
Complex
MoO3
<1
Cations
Nb2O5
2-2.5
Cations
SiO2
Cations
Oxidized carbon
2-4
Cations
TiO2
4-6
Cations or anions
CeO2
Cations or anions
ZrO2
Cations or anions
Co3O4
7-9
Cations or anions
Al2O3
8.5
Anions or cations
Carbon black
8-10
Anions
Adapted from: Synthesis of solid catalysts, Ed. K.P. de Jong, 2009, Wiley
Deposition-precipitation (DP).
DP is possible by the presence of the support which
provides nucleation sites for the metal precursor after
addition of a nucleation agent (base)
It is important to control base addition to avoid
concentration gradients during precipitation
Urea is an optimum precipitating agent since it gently
varies the pH leading to marginal concentration
gradients
Ru(NO)(NO3)3
H2
-Al2O3
Dry at room
temperature for 12 h
1.5 wt.%
Ru
523 K / 1 h
4Ru
773 K / 1 h
5Ru
873 K / 1 h
7Ru
923 K / 1 h
8Ru
973 K / 1 h
12Ru
973 K / 2 h
16Ru
973 K / 3 h
23Ru
4Ru
0.2
2.00.3 nm
0
150
0.1
8Ru
100
TOFCO(s )
Frequency
100
6.01.9 nm
50
0
30
12Ru
20
12.04.0 nm
10
0
10
15
Rusize(nm)
20
25
10
15
Rusize(nm)
20
25
microemulsion
1.00
H 2O
0.25
0.75
Or
ico
gn
Ag
ua
0.00
0.50
0.50
0.75
0.25
1.00
0.00
0.00
0.25
0.50
Surfactante
Orgnico
0.75
1.00
Metal
precursor
Ratio
0
oil
Particle
size
Surfactant/
Oil
Temperature
Surfactant
Metallic particles
H2 O
Bimetallic particles
H2 O
RhCl3
RhCl3
H2 O
HAuCl4
H2PtCl6
AuHCl4
H 2N2
Rh0
xides
H2PtCl6
Fe(NO3)3
Fe(NO3)3
H2N2 /NaBH4
PtAu
NaOH/NH4
OH
Fe[Oy(OH)x]
H2O
%
Org.
%
Surf.
%
oa
s/ob
nm
RhA
9,6
71,4
19,0
9,18
0,27
n.d.
RhB
1,8
85,4
12,8
2,46
0,15
RhC
2,6
84,7
12,7
3,69
0,15
10
RhD
0,7
78,4
20,9
0,53
0,27
22
RhE
2,6
76,9
20,5
2,26
0,27
30
3wt% Rh/Al2O3
111 fcc
200 fcc
220 fcc
331 fcc
222 fcc
Pt1
PR1
PR2
PR4
100 hcp
002 hcp 101 hcp
10
20
30
40
50
102 hcp
60
PR6
110 hcp
70
80
90
2 ()
100
Polyol method.
0.9212 RT
E E
log OH
F
SnCl2H2O
H2PtCl6
EG/NaOH
Carbon
Pt/Sn=3
Temperature
Cell constant
TXRF
Pt/Sn
190C
a = 3,937
14
140C
a = 3,916
42
140C /5%
H2O
a = 3,916
42
H2PtCl6
SnCl2H2O
H2O/HCl
Carbon
EDS
Pt
Sn
Intensidad / u.a.
Cl
2,0 2,5 3,0 3,5 4,0 4,5 5,0 5,5 6,0 6,5 7,0
Energa / keV
45
Intensidad / u.a.
Pt
Cl
Sn
Thermal treatments
3
EDS
Sn??
2,0 2,5 3,0 3,5 4,0 4,5 5,0 5,5 6,0 6,5 7,0
Energa / keV
46
SnClx
H2O
HCl Cl2
Cl2
PtImp
Pt/Sn=3
fcc111
30
40
50
60
Pt3Sn
PtSnx
fcc311
fcc220
C002
20
fcc220
fcc200
EDS
u.a.
Fresch 1
70
2 Grados
80
90
S. Garca-Rodrguez y col. J.
Power Sources 195 (2010) 5564
48
Encapsulating metal
precursors with in
dendrimers renders
precursors for the
formation of very small
particles (few atoms)
It is possible to produce
alloys and core@shell
structures
Simultaneous
reduction of Pt&Ru
precursors
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
EDX counts (Ru L 1) / a.u.
1.-Reduction of Pt
2.-Addition and Ru of Ru
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
0.0
0 .5
1 .0
1 .5
2 .0
2 .5
P o sitio n / n m
3 .0
3 .5
Nucleation by addition of
adequate agents
Above critical
supersaturation nucleation
commences
Below critical
supersaturation aggregation
of particles occurs
The larger the area the more
nuclei, the smaller the
particle
In microemulsion growing is
constrained within the
micelles
Interaccin
Metal-ion
Nucleacin
Interaccin
tomos
metlicos