Understanding shape selectivity effects of hydroisomerization using a reaction equilibrium model

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Authors
Publication date 07-06-2024
Journal Journal of Chemical Physics
Article number 214708
Volume | Issue number 160 | 21
Number of pages 16
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Van 't Hoff Institute for Molecular Sciences (HIMS)
Abstract
We study important aspects of shape selectivity effects of zeolites for hydroisomerization of linear alkanes, which produces a myriad of isomers, particularly for long chain hydrocarbons. To investigate the conditions for achieving an optimal yield of branched hydrocarbons, it is important to understand the role of chemical equilibrium in these reversible reactions. We conduct an extensive analysis of shape selectivity effects of different zeolites for the hydroisomerization of C7 and C8 isomers at chemical reaction equilibrium conditions. The reaction ensemble Monte Carlo method, coupled with grand-canonical Monte Carlo simulations, is commonly used for computing reaction equilibrium of heterogeneous reactions. The computational demands become prohibitive for a large number of reactions. We used a faster alternative in which reaction equilibrium is obtained by imposing chemical equilibrium in the gas phase and phase equilibrium between the gas phase components and the adsorbed phase counterparts. This effectively mimics the chemical equilibrium distribution in the adsorbed phase. Using Henry’s law at infinite dilution and mixture adsorption isotherm models at elevated pressures, we calculate the adsorbed loadings in the zeolites. This study shows that zeolites with cage or channel-like structures exhibit significant differences in selectivity for alkane isomers. We also observe a minimal impact of pressure on the gas-phase equilibrium of these reactions at typical experimental reaction temperatures
⁠. This study marks initial strides in understanding the reaction product distribution for long-chain alkanes.
Document type Article
Language English
Related dataset SI part 1 - Supplementary information: Understanding Shape Selectivity Effects of Hydroisomerization using a Reaction Equilibrium Model SI part 2 - Supplementary information: Understanding Shape Selectivity Effects of Hydroisomerization using a Reaction Equilibrium Model
Published at https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0209210
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