Journal of Chemical Engineering of Japan, Vol.38, No.10, 828-834, 2005
Complete oxidation of ethylene by co-modified mordenites under microwave irradiation
Addition of cobalt oxide (Co3O4) as a heating promoter, absorbing microwave energy with high efficiency, was suggested in order to accelerate microwave heating of zeolite adsorbent or catalyst. The effect of the addition of Co3O4 on the microwave heating of Co-modified mordenites prepared by the impregnation method and physical mixing was investigated. Catalytic oxidation of ethylene on Co-modired mordenites was also examined under microwave irradiation. Co3O4 promoted microwave heating of the mordenite bed when Co3O4 and mordenite were mixed physically. The physical mixture with Co3O4 of 50 wt% was heated up to 518 K by microwave irradiation. The desorption peak of water for pellet type Co-modified mordenite was very sharp in microwave heating after pre-adsorption of water vapor and most of adsorbed water desorbed in the initial stage of the microwave heating. The sharp desorption peak of water indicates that the pelletized sample was heated to higher temperatures than powder one. In the case of the pelletized Co-modified mordenite with Co3O4 of 75 wt %, adsorbed water on mordenite was almost desorbed during microwave irradiation. Co3O4 had both functions of the heating promoter and catalyst, and ethylene was removed with high conversion (93 %) when the pelletized mixture of Co3O4 (75 wt%) and mordenite was irradiated by microwave under steady feed of ethylene, water vapor, and oxygen.