Mt. Tran et al., COMPARATIVE-STUDY OF THE TRANSFORMATION OF N-BUTANE, N-HEXANE AND N-HEPTANE OVER H-MOR ZEOLITES WITH VARIOUS SI AL RATIOS/, Applied catalysis. A, General, 170(1), 1998, pp. 49-58
The transformations of n-butane, n-hexane and n-heptane were carried o
ut in a flow reactor at 523 K, p(alkane)=0.1 bar, P-nitrogen=0.9 bar o
ver a series of H-mordenite samples with framework Si/Al ratios from 6
.6 to 80. Because of the rapid deactivation of the samples (mostly dur
ing n-hexane and n-heptane transformations), a series of product analy
ses was performed at a very short time-on-stream in order to obtain, w
ith good accuracy, the activity and selectivity of the fresh samples.
With all the samples, n-heptane is slightly more reactive than n-hexan
e and much more reactive than n-butane (15-100 times). The effect of t
he acid-site density on the mordenite activity is different for n-buta
ne, n-hexane and n-heptane transformations, which suggests that these
reactions occur through different mechanisms: bimolecular with n-butan
e; monomolecular with n-hexane and n-heptane. The bimolecular mechanis
m of n-butane transformation is confirmed by simultaneous formation of
isobutane, propane and pentanes as primary products. With all the H-m
ordenite samples, isomers and C-3-C-5 alkanes appear as primary produc
ts of n-hexane transformation. From n-heptane, C-3-C-5 alkenes are obs
erved as primary products as well as isomers and C-3-C-6 alkanes. The
isomer/light products ratio is approximately equal to 2 from n-hexane
and 0.2 from n-heptane, as is expected from the relative difficulty in
the modes of cracking: difficult C mode (involving two secondary carb
enium-ion intermediates) from n-hexane and relatively easy B mode (one
tertiary and one secondary carbenium-ion intermediates) from n-heptan
e. However, most of the light products do not result from direct crack
ing of C-6 and C-7 compounds. Whatever the reactant, the product distr
ibution is practically identical for all the dealuminated samples. Ver
y different distributions of the C-3-C-6 products are observed with th
e non-dealuminated sample: faster formation of C-3 at the expense of C
-4-C-6, in particular C-4. This large change in selectivity should be
due to the presence of mesopores in the dealuminated samples rather th
an the larger density of acid sites in the non-dealuminated one. (C) 1
998 Elsevier Science B.V.