Catalysis Letters, Vol.28, No.2-4, 187-201, 1994
Isobutane 2-Butene Alkylation on Mcm-22 Catalyst - Influence of Zeolite Structure and Acidity on Activity and Selectivity
The catalytic behavior of the novel MCM-22 zeolite for the continuous alkylation of isobutane with 2-butene has been investigated at a temperature of 50-degrees-C, 2.5 MPa total pressure, and a variety of olefin space velocities. At high olefin conversions the MCM-22 zeolite showed a very high initial cracking activity attributable to strong Bronsted acid sites, as well as to the existence of strong diffusional restrictions of the TMP’s (formed inside the zeolite) to exit through the channels. At short times on stream (TOS), TMP’s account for ca. 40% of the C-8 fraction. The olefin conversion and the cracking activity rapidly decline with TOS, while the alkylate product became richer in dimethylhexenes, indicating a predominance of 2-butene dimerization and a loss of hydrogen transfer activity as the catalyst aged. Moreover, MCM-22 gives less TMP’s than large-pore zeolites (USY, beta, mordenite), but more than the medium-pore ZSM-5 at similar 2-butene conversion. The latter catalyst was much more selective for olefin dimerization than for isobutane alkylation, presumably because formation of the bulkier TMP’s was strongly impeded in its smaller pores.
Keywords:CRACKING