Catalytic dehydrogenation of methylcyclohexane (MCH) to toluene in a palladium/alumina hollow fibre membrane reactor
Date
2012-11-20Author
Mohd Irfan Hatim, Mohamed Dzahir, Dr.
Umi Fazara, Md. Ali, Dr.
Muhammad Syarhabil, Ahmad, Dr.
Fahmi, Riduwan
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A compact multifunctional Pd/alumina hollow fibre membrane reactor (HFMR) has been developed and used for the catalytic dehydrogenation of methylcyclohexane to toluene. The developed HFMR consists of a thin and defect-free Pd membrane of 5 μm coated directly onto the outer surface of an alumina hollow fibre substrate. The substrate, was prepared by a phase inversion/sintering method, possess a unique asymmetric structure which can be characterised by a very porous inner surface from which finger-like voids extend across approximately 80% of the fibre cross-section with the remaining 20% consisting of a denser sponge-like outer layer. A 50 wt% Ni/Al2O3 catalyst is directly deposited into the asymmetric support, with a fraction of catalyst particles distributed uniformly in the finger-like macro-voids while the others on the lumen surface forming a “filter-cake”-like layer. A significant increase in gas permeation resistance occurs due to this “filter-cake”-like catalyst layer when the catalyst loading (weight per unit fibre length) is above 2.3 mgcm-1. Methylcyclohexane conversion increases with the increasing temperatures, because of the endothermic nature of the reaction; while decreases with the higher sweep gas flow rates due to the more serious catalyst deactivation in the HFMR. For a HFMR with 1.0 mg cm-1 of catalyst loading, methylcyclohexane conversion of approximately 26% can be achieved at 610 °C with the sweep gas flowrate of 20 ml min-1, while for a porous membrane reactor and a fixed-bed reactor the methylcyclohexane conversion of 50% and 25% can be achieved at identical operating temperature.