(562i) Experimental and Simulation Studies of Effects of Operating Conditions and Membrane Properties On the Performance of Zeolite Membrane Reactors for High Temperature Water Gas Shift Reaction | AIChE

(562i) Experimental and Simulation Studies of Effects of Operating Conditions and Membrane Properties On the Performance of Zeolite Membrane Reactors for High Temperature Water Gas Shift Reaction

Authors 

Yang, S. - Presenter, University of Cincinnati
Kim, S. J., University of Cincinnati


Experimental and Simulation Studies of Effects of
Operating Conditions and Membrane Properties on the Performance of Zeolite
Membrane Reactors for High Temperature Water Gas Shift Reaction

Seok-Jhin Kim, Shaowei Yang, Junhang Dong

Department of Chemical & Materials Engineering,
University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH 45220, USA

ABSTRACT

Modified microporous
MFI-type zeolite membranes have been studied as high temperature water gas
shift (WGS) membrane reactors (MR) using a cerium-doped ferrite (Fe/Ce) catalyst. The effects of the reaction conditions and
the membrane separation properties on the CO-conversion (cCO)
in the MR were investigated experimentally and by simulations using a simple one-dimensional
model which was validated by the experimental data. The experimental results
have demonstrated that the zeolite MRs with moderate H2 separation
performance are capable of overcoming the equilibrium CO-conversion (cCO,e) existing in traditional packed-bed reactors at
operating temperatures of >500oC where CO reaction rate is rapid
enough to effectively minimize the permeation of the unreacted CO. The model
calculations have shown that near-completion CO-conversion (cCO>99.5%)
may be achieved under realistic operating temperature, pressure, space velocity
and catalyst load even for membranes with moderate H2 selectivity,
e.g. (aH2/CO2<50)
and H2permeance (<3×10-7mol/s·m2·Pa).