In the process of CO hydrogenation to olefins by the Fischer–Tropsch synthesis (FTO), the support is a key factor in the activity, selectivity, and thermal and chemical stability of the… Click to show full abstract
In the process of CO hydrogenation to olefins by the Fischer–Tropsch synthesis (FTO), the support is a key factor in the activity, selectivity, and thermal and chemical stability of the catalysts, and magnesium aluminate spinel (MgAl2O4) has recently been reported to be very effective. In this work, three methods, namely, citric acid solution combustion (MAC), EDTA sol–gel (MAG) and NH3-coprecipitation (MAP) have been employed to prepare the spinel with detailed characterization of the structure, specific surface area, porosity, and alkalinity properties of both the as-synthesized spinel and the supported catalysts. The results showed that MAC and MAG possessed stronger basicity with more homogeneous particle sizes and narrower distribution of the pore size due to the formation of the metal-nitrate–chelate-complex. This led to a large quantity of gas being released during calcination, however, stronger interactions between the active phase and MAC resulted in lower CO conversion. The catalyst supported on MAP (CMAP) exhibited the highest CO conversion, the highest selectivity of lower olefins, the shortest induction period of reaction, and the lowest AFS chain growth probability; thus, MAP was suggested as an applicable synthetic method. Based on the CMAP catalyst, the effects of the operational conditions were investigated and a 200 hour stability test was carried out with satisfactory performance.
               
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