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Packed-Bed Reactor Performance Enhancement by Membrane Distributed Feed: The Case of Methanol Oxidative Dehydrogenation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 February 2011

Victor Diakov
Affiliation:
Department of Chemical Engineering, and Center for Molecularly Engineered Materials University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN 46556, USA
Arvind Varma*
Affiliation:
Department of Chemical Engineering, and Center for Molecularly Engineered Materials University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN 46556, USA
*
* Author to whom correspondence should be addressed Tel: 1–574–631–6491; Fax: 1–574–631–8366; e-mail: avarma@nd.edu
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Abstract

For methanol oxidative dehydrogenation to formaldehyde, the performance of the packed-bed membrane reactor (PBMR) is compared with that of the conventional fixed-bed reactor (FBR) over a wide range of operating conditions. The reaction was studied in three reactor configurations: the conventional FBR and the packed-bed membrane reactor, with either methanol (PBMR-M) or oxygen (PBMR-O) as the permeating component. The kinetics of methanol and formaldehyde partial oxidation reactions were determined and incorporated in a PBMR model. Both experimental data and model considerations demonstrate that the PBMR enhances reactant conversion and selectivity.

Small oscillations in CO production were observed experimentally. Their amplitude was taken as a basis for comparison of packed-bed operation instability. The likely source of oscillatory behavior is the non-uniformity in reaction conditions along the reactor. It was found that membrane distributed feed, by providing a more uniform reactor operation, is an effective remedy from these instabilities.

It is found, both by simulations and experimental observations, that relative reactor performance depends strongly on the operating conditions. Using formaldehyde yield as the basis for optimization, optimal reactor performances are determined to be in the order: PBMR-O > FBR > PBMR-M. Further PBMR productivity enhancement is possible by optimizing the membrane feed distribution pattern.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Materials Research Society 2003

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