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Catalytic decomposition of formic acid in a fixed bed reactor – an experimental and modelling study

Winkler Tom; Baccot Fabien; Eränen Kari; Wärnå Johan; Hilpmann Gerd; Lange Rüdiger; Peurla Markus; Simakova Irina; Grénman Henrik; Murzin Dimitri Yu; Salmi Tapio

Catalytic decomposition of formic acid in a fixed bed reactor – an experimental and modelling study

Winkler Tom
Baccot Fabien
Eränen Kari
Wärnå Johan
Hilpmann Gerd
Lange Rüdiger
Peurla Markus
Simakova Irina
Grénman Henrik
Murzin Dimitri Yu
Salmi Tapio
Katso/Avaa
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Elsevier B.V.
doi:10.1016/j.cattod.2021.10.022
URI
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S092058612100479X?via%3Dihub
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Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on:
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2021120158393
Tiivistelmä

Formic acid is one of the key components in green chemistry being involved in energy storage, production of chemical intermediates and fuel components. Therefore the knowledge of its stability is of crucial importance and a systematic study of its decomposition is needed. The kinetics of formic acid decomposition to hydrogen and carbon dioxide was investigated in a laboratory-scale fixed bed reactor at 150–225 °C and atmospheric pressure. Palladium nanoparticles deposited on porous active carbon Sibunit were used as the heterogeneous catalyst. The catalyst was characterized by nitrogen physisorption and high-resolution transmission electron microscopy. The average palladium nanoparticle size was 5–6 nm. The impacts of mass transfer resistance and formic acid dimerization were negligible under the reaction conditions. Prolonged experiments revealed that the catalyst had a good stability. Hydrogen and carbon dioxide were the absolutely dominant reaction products, whereas the amounts of carbon monoxide and water were negligible. The experimental data were described with three kinetic models: first order kinetics, two-step adsorption-reaction model and multistep adsorption-decomposition model of formic acid. The multistep model gave the best description of the data.

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