Highly Selective Hydrodecarbonylation of Oleic Acid into n-Heptadecane over a Supported Nickel/Zinc Oxide-Alumina Catalyst

Li, G; Zhang, F; Chen, Lei; Zhang, C; Huang, He; Li, X

HERO ID

4937060

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2015

HERO ID 4937060
In Press No
Year 2015
Title Highly Selective Hydrodecarbonylation of Oleic Acid into n-Heptadecane over a Supported Nickel/Zinc Oxide-Alumina Catalyst
Authors Li, G; Zhang, F; Chen, Lei; Zhang, C; Huang, He; Li, X
Journal ChemCatChem
Volume 7
Issue 17
Page Numbers 2646-2653
Abstract The production of second-generation biodiesel with triglycerides or their derivatives through hydroprocessing is considered as a promising approach to make transportation fuels. In this study, a series of Ni-based catalysts supported on basic composite oxides (MO-Al2O3, M=Mg, Ca, Ni, Cu, Zn) were prepared for the catalytic deoxygenation of oleic acid in the presence of H-2. Ni/ZnO-Al2O3 exhibited the highest deoxygenation activity and alkane selectivity, which depended on its moderate basicity. Investigations of the reaction conditions, which include reaction time, reaction temperature, H-2 pressure, and Ni loading, suggested that n-heptadecane was the predominant product and its content increased with reaction temperature. The reaction temperature was more important than H-2 pressure in the catalytic deoxygenation of oleic acid. Additionally, the overall reaction pathways for the conversion of oleic acid were proposed based on the product distribution for different durations and reaction rates of stearic acid, 1-octadecanol, and stearyl stearate, in which the oxygen atoms in the oleic acid were mainly removed in the form of CO through a hydrogenation-dehydrogenation-decarbonylation reaction route. If glycerol trioleate was used instead of oleic acid, Ni/ZnO-Al2O3 exhibited a high hydrodecarbonylation activity and selectivity to n-heptadecane.
Doi 10.1002/cctc.201500418
Wosid WOS:000360821200013
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Keyword alkanes; basicity; fatty acids; nickel; supported catalysts