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  1. Investigation of Solid Particle Reactors for Nonoxidative Dehydrogenation of Ethane: Toward Solar Thermal Ethylene Production

    Concentrating solar power plants can generate renewable heat at temperatures well above those of most industrial processes. Ceramic particles irradiated with concentrated sunlight can store high-quality sensible heat and transfer this to power generation systems. These concepts and materials hold great potential to also enable thermal processes in the chemical industry, but effective strategies for transferring heat from thermal energy storage media into chemical reactors are still under development. This present work evaluated the thermal and chemical compatibility of various solid particle media (including quartz, bauxite, and alumina particles) integrated directly into tube reactors and the subsequent effects on reactormore » performance for the nonoxidative dehydrogenation of ethane reaction. Empty tube reactors without loaded particles (representing conventional ethane cracking coils) showed significant heat transfer limitations as the tube diameter was scaled. The incorporation of media into the reactor significantly aided heat transfer to the gaseous ethane reactant and increased its conversion by as much as 10% at similar space velocities. Despite direct contact with hydrocarbon gases, alumina and quartz media showed negligible coke formation. Even during reaction in 100% ethane feed gas at 825 °C, the average selectivity of the coke product was only 0.57% when using the quartz media. These materials further demonstrated excellent thermal stability during subsequent reoxidation in air at 800 °C, which simulated the reheating of particles in a circulating particle solar receiver. Conversely, high rates of coke formation, with a product selectivity of 27.5%, were observed on sintered bauxite particles during the reaction, likely promoted by transition metal constituents. These particles fractured upon reoxidation due to exotherms generated from coke combustion. In conclusion, while the use of cofed steam could mitigate attrition of redox-active particles, the ability of inert metal oxide particles to efficiently transfer heat to concentrated ethane reactant gas while suppressing side reactions or degradation suggests that these media could effectively couple solar thermal plants to reactors for next-generation production of ethylene and other critical chemicals.« less
  2. Topological perturbation to a standard dehydrogenation catalyst, Pt3Sn

    Topological materials, which exhibit protected topological surface states (TSS) near the Fermi level, have been proposed to be good catalysts. Topological catalysis may be more prevalent than we suspect, and not limited to exotic new materials. Here we study a known dehydrogenation catalyst, Pt3Sn alloy, which happens to be a topological semimetal, and probe the participation of TSSs in catalytic dehydrogenation of methane catalyzed by this material. Through first principle modeling and detailed analysis of the electronic structure for topological and non-topological surfaces of Pt3Sn, we find that TSS get significantly altered by the binding of reaction intermediates, particularly H.more » However, this effect of TSS on the binding of the reagents is merely perturbative, as the majority of the adsorbate binding is achieved by not-surface-focused electronic states, located much deeper below the Fermi level. Therefore, the reaction energetics and selectivity are predominantly determined by electronic states other than TSS. The fact that TSS are available for the reagent binding does not alone guarantee that the catalysis is strongly driven by TSS. However, TSS are not to be ignored, as small changes in the energetics along the reaction profile can translate into substantial differences in the reaction rate. Hence, in our view, Pt3Sn – a topological material – is first and foremost a standard catalyst, with added topological features, and not purely a topological catalyst. Our results point at the need to carefully consider all the bonding effects at the topological material interface.« less
  3. Pore Resolved Simulations of Joule Heating in Fibrous Media using an Embedded Boundary Method

    Joule heating has been regarded as an energy-efficient and sustainable method for heating materials and gases at large scales. The modeling of local temperature effects at pore-resolved scales for such systems, however, has been difficult to achieve due to challenges in coupling thermo-chemical processes in complex porous media and in large representative volume elements (RVEs). To this end, we developed an electro-thermal model at the pore scale to study Joule heating effects in large heterogeneous systems with different microstructures. This was achieved using the level set method to implicitly delineate distinct regions within the domain, and an embedded boundary methodmore » to facilitate heat exchange across the fluid-solid interface. Moreover, we applied this method to investigate unsteady non-linear electro-thermal effects in non-woven fibrous graphite conductors for RVEs with characteristic lengths of 2 mm, with different fiber orientations, porosity (80% – 90%) and fiber diameters (10 – 20µm). The coupled equations were solved numerically and they produced peak temperatures greater than 2000 K resulting in heating rates as high as 80,000 K/s. Moreover, the results depended strongly on the microstructure of the fiber skeleton and current density. Geometries with large fibers (∼ 20µm) had the highest average and peak temperatures with the mean temperature increasing by 3.9 % while the peak temperature increased by 9.9 %. Anisotropic domains on the other hand had the lowest mean and peak temperatures with peak and mean temperatures of 2293 K and 1437.7K respectively representing a corresponding 12.1% and 5.1% drop in the temperatures. An increase in porosity from 80% to 90%, however, led to an increase in the peak temperature by 5.1%.« less
  4. Multi-Analytical Investigation of Arsenical Transfer and Remediation on Nineteenth-Century Green Books

    Books containing heavy metals, specifically nineteenth-century green arsenical books, have been identified at Northwestern University Libraries, raising health and safety concerns related to handling. Copper acetoarsenite pigments, such as emerald green, were detected on book covers, decorative page edges, labels, and other components using noninvasive analytical techniques including X-ray fluorescence (XRF), Raman spectroscopy, and Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy. Further examination of selected volumes using synchrotron radiation (SR) techniques revealed pigment migration, degradation, and arsenic transfer to adjacent books. This paper expands on initial findings through two related experiments. The first explored the transfer of arsenic using mechanical friction; Staedtler Mars®more » white vinyl erasers rubbed on arsenical books generated crumbs which were analyzed via scanning electron microscopy–energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (SEM-EDX). Results confirmed the transfer of arsenic, copper, and lead, with decorative page edges being particularly prone to shedding arsenic onto other materials. The second experiment tested remediation methods on a book contaminated by prolonged exposure to an arsenical neighbor. Surface cleaning using erasers and a vacuum removed flecks of pigment but did not eliminate non-chromophoric arsenic as confirmed by SR analyses, which highlights its presence either as a degradation product embedded within the paper or present in the paper as part of its production process. Findings demonstrate the acute toxicity risk posed by arsenical books and support the need for safe handling protocols. However, materials with only trace levels of arsenic embedded during production may pose a lower risk of transfer. Cross contamination beyond prolonged direct contact appears limited. These results highlight critical considerations for library preservation practices and future research on arsenic in historical materials.« less
  5. Direct reactions with the AT-TPC

    Direct reactions are crucial tools for accessing properties of the atomic nucleus. Fundamental and exotic phenomena such as collective modes, pairing, weakbinding effects and evolution of single-particles energies can be investigated in peripheral collisions between a heavy nucleus and a light target. The necessity of using inverse kinematics to reveal how these structural properties change with isospin imbalance renders direct reactions a challenging technique when using the missing mass method. In this scenario, Active Target Time Projection Chambers (AT-TPC) have demonstrated an outstanding performance in enabling these types of reactions even under conditions of very low beam intensities. The AT-TPCmore » of the Facility for Rare Isotope Beams (FRIB) is a next generation multipurpose Active Target. When operated inside a solenoidal magnet, direct reactions benefit from the measurement of the magnetic rigidity that enables particle identification and the determination of the excitation energy with high resolution without the need of auxiliary detectors. Additionally, the AT-TPC can be coupled to a magnetic spectrometer improving even further its spectroscopic investigation capability. In this contribution, we discuss inelastic scattering and transfer reaction data obtained via the AT-TPC and compare them to theory. In particular, we present the results for the 14C(p,p′) and 12Be (p,d)11Be reactions. For 14C, we compare the experimental excitation energy of the first 1 excited state with coupled-cluster calculationsbased on nuclear interactions from chiral effective field theory and with available shell-model predictions. For 12Be, we determine the theoretical spectroscopic factors of the 12Be (p,d)11Be transfer reaction in the shell modeland compare them to the experimental excitation spectrum from a qualitative standpoint.« less
  6. The role of the Pt-group dehydrogenation catalyst in alkane metathesis for polyolefin deconstruction

    Recent proposed approaches in the depolymerization of waste plastics employ an olefin intermediate to produce alkanes or alkenes using olefin metathesis in tandem chemistry. Here, in this study, we investigated the role of the dehydrogenation catalyst on reaction rate, kinetics, and product distribution in heterogeneous tandem dehydrogenation and olefin metathesis (alkane metathesis) of three different alkane reactants, including polyethylene. We found that many properties to which alkane dehydrogenation rates were sensitive-including metal composition, nanoparticle size, and surface doping of Re species also controlled activity in Tandem D/OM. When comparing Pd, Pt, and Pt3Sn1, supported Pd in tandem with a Re2O7more » olefin metathesis catalyst showed four-fold higher activity (surface area basis) compared to Pt or Pt3Sn1 catalysts on the same support, mainly due to differences in the rate of hydrogenation. Catalyst preparation resulted in metal nanoparticles partially covered by ReOx, as seen from elemental mapping. Co-location of Re2O7 and Pd correlated with increased rates of hydrogenation (i.e., an increase in the rate of alkane formation and simultaneous lowering of the rate of alkene formation), with a reaction order in catalyst study that further supported this conclusion. The Pd and Re2O7 system displayed marked improvement compared to Pt or Pt3Sn1 with Re2O7, and previous work, in the depolymerization rate of a linear polyethylene feedstock, with over 94 % reduction in polymer molecular weight in 15 h at 190 °C using less catalyst and increased reactant loadings, while keeping solvent to polymer consumption below 2.5.« less
  7. Nonoxidative dehydrogenation of propane using boron-incorporated silica-supported Pt Sites synthesized by atomic layer deposition

    Nonoxidative dehydrogenation of propane to propylene using Pt-based supported catalysts is an active research area in catalysis because catalyst attributes of Pt sites can be controlled by careful design of active sites. One way to achieve this is by the addition of a second metal that may impart a change in the electron density of active sites, which in turn affects catalytic performance. In this study, bimetallic Pt and B sites were deposited on powder SiO2 using atomic layer deposition (ALD). Boron was first deposited on SiO2 via half-cycle ALD using triisoproplyborate as the B source. Following calcination, Pt depositionmore » was performed via half-cycle ALD using trimethyl(methylcyclopentadienyl)platinum(IV) as the Pt source. The synthesized catalysts were reduced under H2 at 550 °C and characterized using inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectroscopy for elemental analysis, diffuse reflectance infrared Fourier transform spectroscopy of adsorbed CO to examine the properties of Pt, and time-resolved X-ray absorption near edge structure spectroscopy to examine the changes in the reducibility of Pt sites. The samples were then tested for nonoxidative dehydrogenation of propane at 550 °C using a fixed-bed plug-flow reactor to examine the role of B on the catalytic performance. Characterization results showed that the addition of B imparted an increase in electron density and affected the reducibility of Pt sites. In addition, incorporating B on SiO2 created anchoring sites for Pt ALD. The amount of Pt deposited on B/SiO2 was 2.2 times that on SiO2. Catalytic activity results revealed the addition of B did not change the initial activity of Pt sites significantly, but improved propylene selectivity from 80% to 87% and stability almost threefold. The enhanced selectivity and stability of PtB/SiO2 is most presumably due to favored desorption of propylene and mitigating coke formation under reaction conditions, respectively.« less
  8. Controlling Bond Scission Pathways of Isopropanol on Fe- and Pt-Modified Mo2N Model Surfaces and Powder Catalysts

    Biomass valorization can be used to produce value-added chemicals and fuels from renewable biomass resources by upgrading them via selective bond scission while retaining certain functional groups. Specifically, upgrading biomass through the dehydrogenation of alcohols to carbonyl compounds has gained interest as a method of utilizing biomass-derived alcohols while additionally producing H2. In this work, isopropanol was used as a probe molecule to control bond scission selectivity over Fe- and Pt-modified molybdenum nitride (Mo2N) model surfaces and powder catalysts. Trends in the selectivity toward dehydration and dehydrogenation were dependent on both the type and coverage of the metal overlayer onmore » model surfaces. These results were then extended to the corresponding powder catalysts to demonstrate how model surface studies can inform the design of supported catalysts. Density functional theory calculations provided insights into controlling the dehydration and dehydrogenation pathways. In conclusion, this work shows that a fundamental understanding of the reactivity and intermediates on Mo2N-based model surfaces can be applied to understand the catalytic performance of metal-modified Mo2N powder catalysts, and also demonstrates that Mo2N-based catalysts are potentially promising materials for upgrading biomass-derived oxygenates.« less
  9. Classification of Adsorbed Hydrocarbons Based on Bonding Configurations of the Adsorbates and Surface Site Stabilities

    The design of heterogeneous catalysts can be accelerated by identifying relevant descriptors that accurately and effectively link the binding and activation energies to reactivity. Herein, we investigated scaling relations between binding energies of various hydrocarbon-based adsorbates on three different Pt surfaces and metal binding energies estimated via the recently developed α-scheme model. In this study, we find that the scaling slopes are similar for certain groups of adsorbates, which then can be classified based on their spatial and electronic structure enabling fast description of binding strengths for each member of the class. Hence, our findings show that the binding energiesmore » of simple hydrocarbons CHx, x = {0,1,2,3,4}, and CHCH2 can be used to identify the binding energies of more complex hydrocarbon-based adsorbates. We introduce this classification to establish a generalizable scheme in which complex hydrogenation/dehydrogenation processes of higher hydrocarbons can be predicted via the binding energies of simpler hydrocarbon-based species and ultimately through surface site stabilities.« less
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