Low temperature dehydration of glycerol to acrolein in vapor phase with hydrogen as dilution: From catalyst screening via TPSR to real-time reaction in a fixed-bed

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Abstract

Temperature programmed surface reaction (TPSR) was developed as a method for rapid screening of catalysts. In this study, a series of acid catalysts was screened for the low-temperature dehydration of glycerol to acrolein via TPSR. Results suggested that most catalysts show activity of glycerol conversion to acrolein at a greatly different temperature range. HY, SiO2 supported H4SiW12O40 (STA/SiO2), SO42−/ZrO2, and SO42−/TiO2 were observed to be efficient for the conversion of glycerol into acrolein at 210◦C, which was significantly lower than that generally reported (250–340◦C). Moreover, high selectivity of acrolein was gained at 85% and 86% over SiW/SiO2 and SO42−/TiO2, respectively. A new style catalyst, ZnCl2/SiO2, was also found to be highly selective to acrolein and evaluated in a conventional fixed-bed reactor. Especially, stability tests showed that the catalyst life was up to 300 h with no clear deactivation on ZnCl2 /SiO2 with hydrogen as dilution.

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Wang, X., Zhao, F., & Huang, L. (2020). Low temperature dehydration of glycerol to acrolein in vapor phase with hydrogen as dilution: From catalyst screening via TPSR to real-time reaction in a fixed-bed. Catalysts, 10(1). https://doi.org/10.3390/catal10010043

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