Issue 11, 2019, Issue in Progress

Irreversible catalytic methylcyclohexane dehydrogenation by surface protonics at low temperature

Abstract

Liquid organic hydrides are regarded as promising for use as hydrogen carriers via the methylcyclohexane (MCH)–toluene–hydrogen cycle. Because of the endothermic nature of MCH dehydrogenation, the reaction is usually conducted at temperatures higher than 623 K. In this work, low-temperature catalytic MCH dehydrogenation was demonstrated over 3 wt% Pt/CeO2 catalyst by application of electric field across a fixed-bed flow reactor. Results show that a high conversion of MCH beyond thermodynamic equilibrium was achieved even at 423 K. Kinetic analyses exhibited a positive correlation of hydrogen to the reaction rates and an “inverse” kinetic isotope effect (KIE), suggesting that accelerated proton hopping with the H atoms of MCH promotes the reaction. Operando analyses and DFT calculation proved that the reverse reaction (i.e. toluene hydrogenation) was suppressed by the facilitation of toluene desorption in the electric field. The electric field promoted MCH dehydrogenation by surface proton hopping, even at low temperatures with an irreversible pathway.

Graphical abstract: Irreversible catalytic methylcyclohexane dehydrogenation by surface protonics at low temperature

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
17 Jan 2019
Accepted
10 Feb 2019
First published
18 Feb 2019
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

RSC Adv., 2019,9, 5918-5924

Irreversible catalytic methylcyclohexane dehydrogenation by surface protonics at low temperature

K. Takise, A. Sato, K. Murakami, S. Ogo, J. G. Seo, K. Imagawa, S. Kado and Y. Sekine, RSC Adv., 2019, 9, 5918 DOI: 10.1039/C9RA00407F

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