The possibility to increase the performance (productivity or selectivity) of a chemical reactor by using periodic variations of reaction parameters (e.g. reactant concentration or temperature) has been theoretically envisaged since the beginning of the 70th. The experimental validation of the predicted positive effects was successful in the case of concentration variation but failed for temperature variation. This was mainly due to the high thermal inertia of the conventional chemical reactors used for the measurements which prevented to create variations having a sufficiently high frequency. Microstructure reactors own, at the contrary to conventional reactors, a very low thermal inertia and allow to generate temperature oscillations with an amplitude of about ten to hundred Kelvin at a frequency in the order of magnitude of 10-1 to 4 Hz. These properties, coupled with the possibility to introduce a catalytic active material within the devices, seem to make them well suited for the study of the effects of fast periodic temperature variations of a catalytic reaction. The objective of this work was to demonstrate that non-stationary temperature conditions may increase the reaction rate of a heterogeneously catalyzed reaction up to values not predicted by the classical Arrhenius dependency towards the temperature. Two different types of microstructure reactors have been used. The reaction was taking place in the first one (FTC-type 2) in microstructured channels on whose walls a catalytic layer was deposed. In the second one (FTC-type 3), the reaction was taking place on a piece of sintered metal fibres (SMF) plate placed in a reaction chamber. The catalytic active material was deposed on the SMF plate filaments. Both devices where permanently heated by electrical resistors and periodically cooled down with water flowing through cooling channels incorporated in the devices. The test reaction chosen for the experimental measurements was the CO oxidation reaction, heterogeneously catalyzed by platinum supported on alumina (Pt/Al2O3). The reaction behaviour under stationary thermal conditions was consistent with the one predicted by the Arrhenius law. The dependency of the reaction rate with the temperature was exponential with an apparent activation energy of 104 kJ·mol-1, a negative partial reaction order for CO and a positive one for O2. The measurements effectuated under quasi-stationary thermal conditions (slow temperature ramps) have shown that a temperature change rate between 7 and 14 K·min-1 was not sufficient to observe any non-trivial effect of the temperature. The reaction behaviour was always predicted by the Arrhenius law. The surface coverage of the reactive species is, in this case, always able to follow the slow temperature changes and the reaction behaves as being always under steady-state conditions. The experiments realized under non-stationary thermal conditions using the FTC-type 2 reactor have also failed to demonstrate any non-
Andreas Pautz, Vincent Pierre Lamirand, Oskari Ville Pakari, Pavel Frajtag, Tom Mager
Harald Brune, Hao Yin, Wei Fang