skip to main content
OSTI.GOV title logo U.S. Department of Energy
Office of Scientific and Technical Information

Title: Transient Kinetic Experiments within the High Conversion Domain: The Case of Ammonia Decomposition

Journal Article · · Catalysts
DOI:https://doi.org/10.3390/catal9010104· OSTI ID:1492829

In the development of catalytic materials, a set of standard conditions is needed where the kinetic performance of many samples can be compared. This can be challenging when a sample set covers a broad range of activity. Precise kinetic characterization requires uniformity in the gas and catalyst bed composition. This limits the range of convecting devices to low conversion (generally <20%). While steady-state kinetics offer a snapshot of conversion, yield and apparent rates of the slow reaction steps, transient techniques offer much greater detail of rate processes and hence more information as to why certain catalyst compositions offer better performance. In this work, transient experiments in two transport regimes are compared: an advecting differential plug flow reactor (PFR) and a pure-diffusion temporal analysis of products (TAP) reactor. The decomposition of ammonia was used as a model reaction to test three simple materials: polycrystalline iron, cobalt and a bimetallic preparation of the two. These materials presented a wide range of activity and it was not possible to capture transient information in the advecting device for all samples at the same conditions while ensuring uniformity. We push the boundary for the theoretical estimates of uniformity in the TAP device and find reliable kinetic measurement up to 90% conversion. However, what is more advantageous from this technique is the ability to observe the time-dependence of the reaction rate rather than just singular points of conversion and yield. For example, on the iron sample we observed reversible adsorption of ammonia and on cobalt materials we identify two routes for hydrogen production. From the time-dependence of reactants and product, the dynamic accumulation was calculated. This was used to understand the atomic distribution of H and N species regulated by the surface of different materials. When ammonia was pulsed at 550 °C, the surface hydrogen/nitrogen, (H/N), ratios that evolved for Fe, CoFe and Co were 2.4, 0.25 and 0.3 respectively. This indicates that iron will store a mixture of hydrogenated species while materials with cobalt will predominantly store NH and N. While much is already known about iron, cobalt and ammonia decomposition, the goal of this work was to demonstrate new tools for comparing materials over a wider window of conversion and with much greater kinetic detail. As a result, this provides an approach for detailed kinetic discrimination of more complex industrial samples beyond conversion and yield.

Research Organization:
Idaho National Laboratory (INL), Idaho Falls, ID (United States)
Sponsoring Organization:
USDOE Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE)
Grant/Contract Number:
AC07-05ID14517
OSTI ID:
1492829
Report Number(s):
INL/JOU-19-52383-Rev000; CATACJ
Journal Information:
Catalysts, Vol. 9, Issue 1; ISSN 2073-4344
Publisher:
MDPICopyright Statement
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English
Citation Metrics:
Cited by: 10 works
Citation information provided by
Web of Science

References (37)

Ammonia as a possible element in an energy infrastructure: catalysts for ammonia decomposition journal January 2012
Carbon-supported cobalt–iron catalysts for ammonia synthesis journal January 2006
Phase diagrams for surface alloys journal September 1997
Elucidating complex catalytic mechanisms based on transient pulse-response kinetic data journal May 2014
Why the optimal ammonia synthesis catalyst is not the optimal ammonia decomposition catalyst journal March 2005
The U.S. Department of Energy's National Hydrogen Storage Project: Progress towards meeting hydrogen-powered vehicle requirements journal February 2007
Momentary Equilibrium in Transient Kinetics and Its Application for Estimating the Concentration of Catalytic Sites journal June 2013
TAP studies of ammonia decomposition over Ru and Ir catalysts journal January 2011
Mechanistic origin of the different activity of Rh-ZSM-5 and Fe-ZSM-5 in N2O decomposition journal June 2008
Noise in temporal analysis of products (TAP) pulse responses journal March 2007
A dynamic method for the study of heterogeneous catalytic kinetics journal September 1967
Transient Response Method in Heterogeneous Catalysis journal January 1974
Thin-zone TAP reactor as a basis of “state-by-state transient screening” journal November 2004
Needle in a haystack catalysis journal June 2008
Acceleration in catalyst development by fast transient kinetic investigation journal May 2003
Ammonia synthesis with barium-promoted iron–cobalt alloys supported on carbon journal March 2003
Assessment of kinetic modeling procedures of TAP experiments journal March 2007
The six-flow reactor technology A review on fast catalyst screening and kinetic studies journal July 2000
Dynamic methods for catalytic kinetics journal June 2008
Temporal analysis of products (TAP)—Recent advances in technology for kinetic analysis of multi-component catalysts journal January 2010
The Y-procedure: How to extract the chemical transformation rate from reaction–diffusion data with no assumption on the kinetic model journal December 2007
Evolution, achievements, and perspectives of the TAP technique journal March 2007
The Y-Procedure methodology for the interpretation of transient kinetic data: Analysis of irreversible adsorption journal December 2011
Individual Fe−Co Alloy Nanoparticles on Carbon Nanotubes: Structural and Catalytic Properties journal September 2008
Catalyst Design by Interpolation in the Periodic Table:  Bimetallic Ammonia Synthesis Catalysts journal August 2001
Catalytic Synthesis of Ammonia—A “Never-Ending Story”? journal May 2003
Pulse response analysis using the Y-procedure: A data science approach journal December 2018
Thin-Zone TAP Reactor versus Differential PFR:  Analysis of Concentration Nonuniformity for Gas−Solid Systems journal August 2005
Extracting Knowledge from Data through Catalysis Informatics journal June 2018
Forty years of temporal analysis of products journal January 2017
High-Temperature Stable, Iron-Based Core-Shell Catalysts for Ammonia Decomposition journal November 2010
Thin-zone TAP-reactor – theory and application journal October 1999
H2 Production via Ammonia Decomposition Using Non-Noble Metal Catalysts: A Review journal July 2016
Ammonia decomposition on Fe(110), Co(111) and Ni(111) surfaces: A density functional theory study journal May 2012
H2 Production via Ammonia Decomposition Using Non-Noble Metal Catalysts: A Review journalarticle January 2016
Catalytic Synthesis of Ammonia — A “Never-Ending Story”? journal July 2003
Analysis of mass and heat transfer in transient experiments over heterogeneous catalysts journal November 1995

Cited By (1)

Multiscale and Innovative Kinetic Approaches in Heterogeneous Catalysis journal May 2019

Figures / Tables (10)