Abstract
The influence of acid strength was evaluated toward the selectivity to propene on conversion of 1-pentene. For the catalytic cracking of 1-pentene, the main reaction pathways and the molar ratio of propene to ethene (P/E ratio) were controlled by acid strength with the appropriate amount of total acid sites. The results showed that the P/E ratio increased with decreasing amounts of strong acid sites, since the activation energies of individual reaction pathways were influenced by acid strength to a different extent. Strong acid sites could promote pathway I′ (C52- → C22- + C32-) and pathway II′-1 (C62- → C22- + C42-), while weak acid sites preferred pathway II′ (2C52- → C10+ → C42- + C62-) and pathway II′-2 (C62- → 2C32-), since pathways II′ and II′-2 underwent some energetically favorable routes (tertiary-secondary, secondary-secondary) of carbenium ion intermediates. By manipulation of the acid strength distribution on ZSM-5, the P/E ratio and selectivity of propene could be significantly improved, suggesting that this can provide an important guideline for improving such a process. In addition, we also designed a coupled process combing butene and pentene coconversion, as pentene and butene could be produced during C42- and C52- catalytic cracking. The coupled process could offer a promising solution to gain high selectivity of propene from C4 and C5 olefin cracking.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 4048-4059 |
| Number of pages | 12 |
| Journal | ACS Catalysis |
| Volume | 5 |
| Issue number | 7 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - 4 Jun 2015 |
Keywords
- 1-pentene catalytic cracking
- ZSM-5
- acid strength
- propene
- reaction pathways