| Literature DB >> 35865611 |
Ji-Feng Wang1, Si-Jia Ding1, Shao-Zhong Peng1, Zhan-Lin Yang1, Yan-Ze Du1.
Abstract
The molecular structures of hydrocarbon molecules determine the competitive and sequence reactions in the diesel hydrocracking process. In this study, the hydrocracking reactions of typical hydrocarbons with various saturation degrees and molecular weights in diesel fractions synergistically catalyzed by the Ni-Mo-S nanocluster and Al-Si FAU zeolite are investigated. The results show that the two major rate-controlling steps in saturated hydrocarbon hydrocracking are dehydrogenation on the Ni-Mo-S active sites and the cracking of the C-C bonds on the FAU zeolite acid center. Moreover, the major rate-controlling step in cracking the cycloalkyl aromatic hydrocarbons is the protonation of the aromatic ring. Moreover, the aromatic hydrocarbons presented an apparent advantage in competitive adsorption on the Ni-Mo-S active sites, whereas hydrocarbons with higher molecular weights demonstrated a moderate adsorption advantage on both Ni-Mo-S active sites and FAU zeolite acid centers. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35865611 PMCID: PMC9264118 DOI: 10.1039/d1ra09246d
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 4.036
Fig. 1Ni–Mo–S model.
Fig. 2FAU model.
Detailed calculation parameters
| Calculation details | Parameters | |
|---|---|---|
| Electronic treatment | Orbital cut off | 5.0 Å |
| Thermal smearing | 5 × 10−4 Ha | |
| Convergence tolerance | Self-consistent field density convergence (SCF) | 2 × 10−5 |
| Binding energy tolerance | 2 × 10−5 Ha | |
| Force tolerance | 4 × 10−3 Ha Å−1 | |
| D2 correction[ | Exchange-correlation dependent factor s6 | 1.0 |
| Damping coefficient | 20.0 | |
Adsorption of alkanes, cycloalkanes and aromatics on the Ni–Mo-edge
| Hydrocarbons | HOMO eigen value/eV | Morphology | Binding energy kJ mol−1 | Gibbs free energy kJ mol−1 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
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| −54.56 | −10.69 |
|
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| −51.93 | −3.44 |
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| −57.81 | −12.60 |
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| −101.93 | −43.95 |
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| −81.09 | −36.93 |
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| −76.27 | −33.20 |
|
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| −89.20 | −45.36 |
|
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| −126.91 | −86.57 |
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| ||||
Dehydrogenation of C-10 normal alkane, iso-alkane and cycloalkane
| Process | Alkane | TS-1 | Radical | TS-2 | C | TS-3 | H2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Morphology |
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| Bonding energy change kJ mol−1 | N-decane | +255.09 | −65.82 | +86.44 | −117.06 | +100.72 | −122.28 |
| Morphology |
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| Bonding energy change kJ mol−1 | Iso-decane | +242.79 | −61.71 | +116.02 | −169.75 | +117.00 | −140.34 |
| Morphology |
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| Bonding energy change kJ mol−1 | Decahydro-naphthalene | +245.67 | −72.07 | +132.41 | −166.55 | +113.96 | −139.20 |
Dehydrogenation of C-14 normal alkane, iso-alkane and cycloalkane
| Process | Alkane | TS-1 | Radical | TS-2 | C | TS-3 | H2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Morphology |
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| Bonding energy change kJ mol−1 | N-tetradecane | +261.56 | −72.91 | +95.68 | −132.50 | +103.68 | −140.05 |
| Morphology |
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| Bonding energy change kJ mol−1 | Iso-tetradecane | +241.21 | −65.11 | +84.27 | −134.51 | +112.46 | −137.22 |
| Morphology |
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| Bonding energy change kJ mol−1 | Decahydr-anthracene | +244.53 | −70.62 | +126.43 | −165.88 | +99.65 | −115.90 |
Adsorption of unsaturated hydrocarbons on FAU-Al
| Hydrocarbons | HOMO eigenvalue/eV | Morphology | Binding energy kJ mol−1 | Gibbs free kJ mol−1 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
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| −58.28 | −10.96 |
|
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| −60.55 | −15.33 |
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| −64.07 | −16.60 |
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| −70.46 | −22.53 |
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| −83.26 | −39.00 |
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| −92.39 | −46.29 |
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| −97.69 | −53.14 |
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| −102.08 | −60.22 |
Fig. 3The LUMO morphology on FAU-Al.
Protonation of unsaturated hydrocarbons on FAU-Al
| Carbonium | Morphology | Mulliken charge/ | Protonation energy kJ mol−1 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| C+ | α-C | α-H | |||
|
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| +0.242 | −0.261 | +0.327 | +23.04 |
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| +0.250 | −0.273 | +0.319 | +18.84 |
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| +0.274 | −0.233 | +0.312 | +21.66 |
|
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| +0.172 | −0.246 | +0.329 | +66.72 |
|
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| +0.245 | −0.262 | +0.333 | +21.68 |
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| +0.241 | −0.249 | +0.326 | +19.59 |
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| +0.272 | −0.232 | +0.298 | +29.45 |
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| +0.140 | −0.248 | +0.303 | +67.86 |
Cracking of alkenes on FAU-Al
| Cracking reaction |
| |||
| Carbonium | Transition state | Reactant | Reaction energy kJ mol−1 | Activation energy kJ mol−1 |
|
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| +69.37 | +181.52 |
| Cracking reaction |
| |||
| Carbonium | Transition state | Reactant | Reaction energy kJ mol−1 | Activation energy kJ mol−1 |
|
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| +64.22 | +175.96 |
| Cracking reaction |
| |||
| Carbonium | Transition state | Reactant | Reaction energy kJ mol−1 | Activation energy kJ mol−1 |
|
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| +89.86 | +201.59 |
| Cracking reaction |
| |||
| Carbonium | Transition state | Reactant | Reaction energy kJ mol−1 | Activation energy kJ mol−1 |
|
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| +63.71 | +179.69 |
Cracking of cycloalkenes on FAU-Al
| Cracking route 1 |
| |||
| Carbonium | Transition state | Reactant | Reaction energy kJ mol−1 | Activation energy kJ mol−1 |
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| +50.54 | +154.52 |
| Cracking route 2 |
| |||
| Carbonium | Transition state | Reactant | Reaction energy kJ mol−1 | Activation energy kJ mol−1 |
|
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| +56.87 | +158.46 |
| Cracking route 1 |
| |||
| Carbonium | Transition state | Reactant | Reaction energy kJ mol−1 | Activation energy kJ mol−1 |
|
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| +52.91 | +146.00 |
| Cracking route 2 |
| |||
| Carbonium | Transition state | Reactant | Reaction energy kJ mol−1 | Activation energy kJ mol−1 |
|
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| +57.25 | +152.97 |
Cracking of aromatics on FAU-Al
| Cracking reaction |
| ||||
| Carbonium | Transition state | Reactant | Reaction energy kJ mol−1 | Activation energy kJ mol−1 | |
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| +20.96 | +125.25 | |
| Cracking reaction |
| ||||
| Carbonium | Transition state | Reactant | Reaction energy kJ mol−1 | Activation energy kJ mol−1 | |
|
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| +22.20 | +131.94 | |