Maciej G.
Walerowski
a,
Stylianos
Kyrimis
b,
Matthew E.
Potter
c,
Alice E.
Oakley
a,
Marina
Carravetta
a,
Lindsay-Marie
Armstrong
b and
Robert
Raja
*a
aSchool of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, University of Southampton, Southampton, SO17 1BJ, UK. E-mail: R.Raja@soton.ac.uk
bSchool of Engineering, University of Southampton, Southampton, SO17 1BJ, UK
cDepartment of Chemistry, University of Bath, Bath, BA2 7AY, UK
First published on 3rd April 2025
Meeting the International Maritime Organization's net-zero target by 2050 necessitates the replacement of marine fossil fuels with sustainable alternatives, such as dimethyl ether (DME). Silicon-doped aluminophosphate (SAPO) solid acid catalysts, particularly the weakly-acidic SAPO-11, can catalyse the selective dehydration of methanol-to-DME with exceptional stability. Herein, we present a combined experimental, computational fluid dynamics, and design of experiments study to augment catalyst efficiency and DME production, and to support scale-up endeavours. Using a four-dimensional design surface, it was found that longer catalyst beds and higher operating temperature increase DME yields, with the catalyst bed length having a more pronounced influence. In contrast, the use of highly concentrated methanol reactant streams had a detrimental effect and this was ascribed to a saturation of the active sites in the SAPO-11 catalyst. Improved single-pass conversions and catalyst longevity on industrial scales can thus be achieved by optimising both the number of acid sites in SAPO-11 and reaction parameters.
DME can be produced either via methanol dehydration, or the one-pot conversion of CO2via a methanol intermediate,9–13 with both methods requiring an acidic catalyst. The traditional methanol-to-DME (MTD) γ-Al2O3 catalyst is rapidly deactivated by water produced during the reaction.10,12,14 In contrast, microporous aluminosilicate solid acid catalysts not only impart shape and size selectivity to this reaction, but are also less susceptible to water-induced deactivation than γ-Al2O3.15 However, aluminosilicates possess strong Brønsted acid sites (BAS) which facilitate the methanol-to-olefins (MTO) reaction and coke formation, thus reducing DME selectivity and catalyst stability.9,12,16,17
Aluminophosphates (AlPOs) and silicon-doped aluminophosphates (SAPOs) form similar frameworks to aluminosilicates. Whilst aluminosilicates frameworks are based on vertex-sharing tetrahedral AlO4 and SiO4 species, AlPOs form near identical frameworks, based on alternating AlO4 and PO4 tetrahedra. Incorporating silicon into the AlPO framework generates a range of possible acid sites, depending on whether silicon substitutes a phosphorous atom (type II), or an aluminium-phosphorous pair (type III). This leads to the formation of either isolated BAS (type II) or silicon islands with BAS located on the periphery of these islands (type III).18–20 Bonding in SAPOs is more ionic compared to aluminosilicates,21 resulting in stronger interactions between the acidic protons and conjugate-basic framework oxygens which reduces their acid strength and makes SAPOs auspicious for the MTD reaction.18,22 SAPO-11 is a particularly promising candidate for the selective production of DME, as silicon substitutes into the AlPO-11 framework primarily via type III substitution, forming silicon islands which reduces the overall acidity.22–26 When applied for MTD, SAPO-11 can achieve 100% DME selectivity, and retain consistent activity even up to 200 hours' on-stream.22 This is likely due to the favourable combination of weakly acidic sites which cannot facilitate the competing MTO reaction, and medium-sized channels which spatially constrain the formation of bulky coke precursors.27 In contrast, at comparable temperatures, H-ZSM-5 yielded 95% DME selectivity.28 Thus, the use of SAPO-11 as a MTD catalyst could translate to a vast reduction in waste and separation costs on an industrial scale.
To accelerate the implementation of SAPO-11 as a MTD catalyst, the macroscopic behaviour must be modelled to facilitate process optimisation. Computational fluid dynamics (CFD) can model the macroscopic behaviour of fluid flowing through a fixed bed reactor by solving a series of mass, momentum, and energy conservation equations, whilst incorporating species mass exchange from chemical reactions.29 CFD simulations additionally facilitate parametric investigations in silico, without the need for multiple costly experiments. This is beneficial for scale-up as detrimental phenomena, such as hotspot formation and pressure drop, can be identified and proactively managed which can potentially minimise catalyst deactivation and maximise productivity. Through an extensive parametric study, Kyrimis et al. highlighted the benefit of using CFD to improve the industrial reactor design for the CO2-to-methanol reaction. They calculated that using a CFD-optimised reactor design, methanol productivity could be increased by 6.9% with a 75% lower pressure drop, compared to a baseline reactor.30 CFD modelling can also provide a unique macroscale view of a reaction by demonstrating the local variations in velocity, pressure, density, temperature, and species concentrations inside a catalytic bed. Potter et al. used CFD to investigate catalytic ethanol dehydration over SAPO-34, highlighting the link between operating temperature, spatial variations in species concentration within the catalyst bed, and the location of the associated cold- and hotspots.31 In a similar vein, Zhuang et al. modelled the MTO reaction over SAPO-34 on an industrial scale, with a particular focus on the dynamic nature of the reaction in the temporal dimension.32 CFD simulations showed that the deactivation front moves from the catalyst bed inlet to the outlet as the reaction proceeds with time. The observed inverse relationship between methanol conversion and space velocity was attributed to lower residence times in the catalyst bed at higher space velocities. Kyrimis et al. used CFD to test two different kinetic models for the CO2-to-methanol reaction,33 showing that although both kinetic models gave similar outlet gas compositions, the temperature profiles inside the catalyst bed varied significantly depending on the kinetic model used. This is a key finding for validation of kinetic models as these are usually derived using only the outlet species concentrations. Incorrect information regarding the species distribution within a catalytic bed could misinform engineering decisions. Thus, a reliable kinetic model must also account for the species distribution along the bed to ensure its accuracy. This type of insight afforded by CFD modelling is challenging to obtain experimentally as it requires bespoke reactors, and even then, the nature of the measurement itself can influence the results. As such, CFD modelling can provide unique and complementary insights which can support scale-up.
In this work, we present a combined experimental and computational optimisation of the MTD reaction using SAPO-11. We firstly investigate the influence of reaction parameters such as temperature, catalyst granule size, methanol concentration in the inlet stream, catalyst bed length, and active site abundance, on experimental catalytic performance. This data then informs the development of kinetic and CFD models, providing a unique and complementary macroscale insight which enables further process optimisation. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study of its kind which combines empirical studies, fully validated CFD modelling, and design of experiments (DoE) investigations to bridge multiple scales and provide valuable information for scale-up of the solid acid catalysed MTD reaction.
The catalysts were thoroughly characterised using energy dispersive spectroscopy (EDS), powder X-ray diffraction (XRD), surface area and porosity analysis, scanning electron microscopy (SEM), solid state nuclear magnetic resonance (ssNMR), ammonia temperature programmed desorption (NH3-TPD), and carbon hydrogen nitrogen (CHN) analysis. The full details of these techniques can be found in section 2 of the ESI.†
SAPO-11 powder was firstly compressed at 4 tonnes for 10 seconds as this was found to yield minimal framework porosity degradation.36 As per the approach outlined by Kyrimis et al.,37 the resulting pellet was then crushed and sieved five times to yield catalyst granules in the size range of 106–300, 300–500, or 500–710 μm. To validate our kinetic model, it is important to understand the distribution of species through the catalyst bed, thus three loadings of SAPO-11 catalyst granules (0.150, 0.300, or 0.450 g), corresponding to three catalyst bed lengths (1.9, 3.6, and 5.4 cm, respectively) were used, similar to Wilkinson et al.38 SAPO-11 catalyst granules of desired size fraction and bed length were then tested at 170, 185, 200, 215, and 230 °C. Methanol at weight hourly space velocities (WHSV) of 0.5, 1, 2, or 3 h−1 (based on 0.300 g catalyst loading) was carried into the reactor using nitrogen at flow rates of 41, 38, 31, or 25 mL min−1. Nitrogen carrier gas was varied to maintain consistent total flow rate and hence residence time at the different methanol WHSVs. Further information on the catalytic procedure can be found in section 3 of the ESI.†
A three-dimensional porous medium CFD model was built in Ansys Fluent 19.2.43 The cylindrical catalyst bed (0.2 cm radius and 1.9, 3.6, or 5.4 cm height) was meshed with Ansys Meshing to give 700000 hexahedral computational cells to ensure mesh independency. The computational cell size was 90 μm for a 106–300 μm catalyst granule with a 40% porosity. To replicate the complex nature of the catalytic phenomena, user defined functions were introduced, focused on coupling molecular diffusion (bulk diffusion mechanisms) with molecule-catalyst interactions (Knudsen diffusion mechanism). A modified Arrhenius equation was used within the model to account for active site abundance and occupancy in SAPO-11.29 Diffusion was described by the dusty-gas model as per Kyrimis et al.,33 inertial and viscous resistances were calculated using the Ergun equation,44 and de Klerk's correlation was utilised to model axial bed porosity.45 CFD simulations were performed for 4000 iterations or until convergence was reached, whichever came first.
Results obtained from CFD-driven DoE investigations were modelled using the Sartorius MODDE® 13.1 Pro software suite.46
Further details of the kinetic, CFD, and DoE models can be found in sections 4, 5, and 6 of the ESI,† respectively.
Four additional SAPO-11 catalysts, with varying silicon loadings (Table S4†), were successfully synthesised using a modified version of the method outlined by Grenev et al.35 These are now referred to as SAPO-11(x) where x represents their actual silicon loading (1.1–2.0 wt%). Characterisation of these four SAPO-11 samples, described in section 7.2 of the ESI† (Fig. S5–S11 and Tables S4–S7), showed that increasing silicon loading primarily increases the number of BAS generated and the total surface area. The SAPO-11 (1.1–2.0) catalysts were used to study the combined influence of BAS abundance and surface area on DME yields.
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Fig. 1 a) Influence of granule size on catalytic performance at a range of temperatures and b) time-on-stream stability of SAPO-11(2.7). |
To gain a preliminary insight into the macroscale behaviour of SAPO-11(2.7) for the MTD reaction, the catalyst bed length was varied between 1.9, 3.6, and 5.4 cm, at temperatures between 170 to 230 °C, with a consistent methanol WHSV of 2 h−1. As expected, longer catalyst beds (5.4 cm) gave higher DME percentage yields (Fig. 2) due to increased catalyst amounts. However, diminishing returns were observed with an increase in temperature and no additional DME percentage yields were obtained by lengthening the catalyst bed beyond 3.6 cm above 215 °C. The 3.6 and 5.4 cm beds have practically identical DME percentage yields at 215 and 230 °C, suggesting that maximum DME percentage yields have been reached under these operating conditions. Remarkably, halving the catalyst bed from 3.6 to 1.9 cm does not halve the DME percentage yields. At 170 °C, the 1.9 cm bed gave a 13% DME yield, whereas the 3.6 cm bed produced a 19% DME yield. At 230 °C, the 1.9 and 3.6 cm beds produced DME yields of 72 and 88%, respectively. This indicates that most of the reaction occurs at the inlet to the catalyst bed. Increasing the reaction temperature, speeds up the reaction rate. In doing so, the catalytic activity occurs earlier still in the reaction bed, thereby limiting the influence of extending the bed length under these operating conditions. A 3.6 cm catalyst bed was selected going forward, as it maximised DME percentage yields while keeping catalytic quantities appropriate.
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Fig. 2 Impact of SAPO-11 (2.7) catalyst bed length on catalytic performance at a range of temperatures. |
The SAPO-11(2.7) catalysed MTD reaction was performed at a range of methanol WHSVs (0.5, 1, 2, and 3 h−1) and temperatures (170–230 °C) to obtain meaningful data necessary for the development of kinetic models, and to determine temperature and concentration dependencies. To isolate the influence of methanol WHSV on catalytic performance, the nitrogen carrier gas flow was varied, so that the total gas flow (methanol plus nitrogen) was similar, leading to comparable residence times. Associated calculations for this procedure can be found in section 3 of the ESI.†Fig. 3a shows that increasing methanol WHSV leads to a reduction in observed DME percentage yields. Inverse correlations were observed at all temperatures between the methanol WHSV and observed DME percentage yields (Fig. 3b).
Given that the residence time was comparable across all experiments, this was tentatively attributed to a saturation of the SAPO-11 catalyst at higher methanol WHSVs. To test this hypothesis, a follow up investigation was conducted in which the catalytic performance of the four additional SAPO-11 catalysts with a range of silicon loadings (Table S4†) was tested. As previously stated, the only notable difference between these four catalysts was the number of acid sites and the total surface area, enabling direct comparison between the four catalysts. A high methanol WHSV (3 h−1) was used to ensure that any saturation was prominent. Fig. S12† shows that higher DME percentage yields can be attained by doping more silicon into the AlPO-11 framework to give SAPO-11 catalysts more acid sites, but as discussed in section 7.2 of the ESI† and shown by Fig. S5,† this is challenging as silicon does not substitute easily into the AlPO-11 framework. This investigation has shown that there is a correlation between DME percentage yields and active site abundance and accessibility which supports our initial assumption that reduction in observed DME percentage yields at higher methanol WHSVs is due to catalyst saturation.
As seen previously in Fig. 1b, no significant decrease in catalytic activity was observed during an accelerated deactivation study suggesting minimal catalyst deactivation. However, it is unreasonable to assume a complete lack of deactivation. Spent SAPO-11(2.7) catalysts were thus characterised to determine the exact level of deactivation occurring. During methanol dehydration, microporous solid acid catalysts deactivate primarily due to the formation of polymeric carbonaceous species (coke) which plug framework pores and thus restrict access to acid sites.14,17,49–51 CHN analysis was performed to ascertain the precise level of coking and hence deactivation of SAPO-11(2.7) during the MTD reaction. As seen in Table 1, some coking and therefore deactivation has occurred during the MTD reaction. The largest 500–710 μm catalyst granules coke the most and this is ascribed to longer reactant residence times within larger granules which increases the likelihood of further methanol dehydration reactions and coke formation.51 Increasing methanol WHSV increases coking, and this is due to the catalyst processing a larger volume of reactant feedstock which naturally results in increased coking. For industrial applications, the use of smaller catalyst granules and less concentrated feedstock streams may improve catalyst longevity and hence reduce downtime and maximise productivity. The relationship between coking and silicon loading of SAPO-11 is less clear (Table S8†), with the SAPO-11(1.4) catalyst showing the highest coke formation which is surprising. More work should be done to understand this finding, but this lies outside the scope of this investigation. Reactivation of the SAPO-11 catalyst could be achieved via oxidative treatment at 600 °C.51 For the industrial methanol-to-gasoline process over a H-ZSM-5 catalyst, parallel reactors are used to facilitate regular coke burn-off,17 vindicating this regeneration strategy on an industrial scale. The coking levels observed within this study (∼1 wt%) match those observed by Dai et al. who used SAPO-11 for the MTO reaction (0.7 wt%).52 These levels are significantly lower compared to other catalysts, such as SAPO-34 and SAPO-41, which gain 10.2 and 5.5 wt% of coke during the same reaction.52 In a separate study, Dai et al. showed that SAPO-11 can maintain methanol conversions >85% for as long as 200 hours' on-stream,22 further confirming the stability of SAPO-11. Compared to other industrially-relevant catalysts such as H-ZSM-5, our SAPO-11 catalyst demonstrates smaller decrease in activity with time-on-stream (Fig. S13†), which validates the excellent stability of SAPO-11 as an MTD catalyst and shows that the small levels of coking seen have no significant influence on observed catalyst performance.
Methanol WHSV (h−1) | Particle size (μm) | Fresh catalyst (wt%) | Spent catalyst (wt%) | Carbon gain (wt%) |
---|---|---|---|---|
2 | 500–710 | 0.15 ± 0.09 | 1.01 ± 0.04 | 0.86 |
300–500 | 0.09 ± 0.03 | 0.73 ± 0.01 | 0.64 | |
106–300 | 0.04 ± 0.00 | 0.73 ± 0.01 | 0.69 | |
3 | 106–300 | 0.04 ± 0.00 | 1.64 ± 0.02 | 1.60 |
2 | 1.04 ± 0.01 | 1.00 | ||
1 | 0.84 ± 0.02 | 0.80 | ||
0.5 | 0.54 ± 0.01 | 0.50 |
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Fig. 4 Linear correlation observed between methanol concentration in the inlet reactant gas stream and the production of DME at a range of temperatures. |
Our calculated activation energy is in relatively good agreement with those reported by Catizzone et al. for the MTD reaction over aluminosilicates,53 adding confidence to our findings. To the best of our knowledge, we present for the very first-time kinetic parameters which describe the MTD reaction over SAPO-11 catalysts.
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Fig. 5 Comparison between experimental SAPO-11(2.7) and CFD-predicted outlet mass fractions of different species for different a) temperatures and b) catalyst bed lengths. |
Fig. S18† shows that the highest rate of DME production takes place in the inlet half of the catalyst bed. Increasing temperature from 170 to 230 °C causes the maximum rate of DME production to occur earlier still in the catalyst bed which is in line with experimental findings (Fig. 2). Fig. 6 and S19, and S20† show the distribution of DME, water, and methanol in the catalyst bed as a function of temperature and methanol WHSV. Increasing temperature leads to maximum concentrations of DME and water occurring earlier in the catalyst bed, whereas increasing the methanol WHSV leads to maximum concentrations of DME and water occurring later in the catalyst bed. This demonstrates that longer catalyst beds may be required to maximise single-pass methanol conversions at higher methanol WHSVs. Fig. S21† shows that static pressure inside the catalyst bed reduces from the inlet to the outlet. Increasing temperature leads to an increase in static pressure but does not impact the distribution of pressure inside the bed. These unique insights into macroscale phenomena obtained using CFD are challenging to obtain experimentally but can prove vital when scaling up reactions as reactors must be designed to withstand various phenomena within them.
Our CFD model is based on laboratory-scale experiments which were free of appreciable mass transfer and diffusion limitations, and catalyst deactivation, as shown by Fig. 1. In an industrial setting however, the presence of feedstock contaminants can lead to catalyst fouling, and larger scales can exacerbate any mass transfer and diffusion limitations, reducing catalyst activity and longevity. Further refinements to our model could thus be achieved by incorporating results from larger scale pilot plant trials which would confirm the presence and magnitude of any deleterious effects, such as catalyst fouling.
The aim of the DoE study was to maximise single-pass methanol conversions, and Fig. 7 shows that increasing methanol WHSV leads to a reduction in predicted methanol conversions. This can be attributed to a saturation of the catalyst bed. At a methanol WHSV of 6 h−1 (Fig. 7c), the DoE model estimated that highest conversions can only be achieved by simultaneously increasing both the reaction temperature and catalyst bed length. On the other hand, at a methanol WHSV of 4 h−1 (Fig. 7a), it is possible to obtain highest predicted conversions, even at low temperatures of 245 °C, simply by extending the catalyst bed length to 7.5 cm. From an industrial point of view, extending catalyst bed lengths and utilising lower methanol WHSV may be an attractive way of achieving higher single-pass methanol conversions while keeping the reaction temperature, and thus the energy requirements, low. SAPOs undergo parallel deactivation whereby the deactivation front moves downwards from the catalyst bed inlet to the outlet.32,55 As such, extending the catalyst bed can additionally reduce downtime associated with catalyst regeneration as longer beds will be able to tolerate prolonged deactivation before exhibiting an appreciable decline in outlet DME yields. A correlation matrix was also generated, seen in Table S10,† showcasing the influence of the input parameters (bed length, WHSV, temperature) on simulated methanol conversions, with larger magnitudes indicating higher influence, and the sign indicating either positive or negative influence. Thus, Table S10† demonstrates that the catalyst bed length (0.67) has a stronger impact on predicted methanol conversion than temperature (0.59), which further vindicates that optimising catalyst bed length is a better strategy to consider for larger scale pilot plant trials than increasing temperature as this can improve both conversions and catalyst longevity. Methanol WHSV has a deleterious (−0.22) influence on conversion for reasons already discussed.
A pure methanol feedstock was used for the experimental conversion of methanol-to-DME, and so our computational models are also based on a reactant feedstock free of contaminants. On an industrial scale, it is possible that the reaction feedstock will contain poisons such as sulphur or chlorine which can bind irreversibly to the catalyst and cause premature deactivation. Water, which can also be present in an industrial feedstock, can compete with methanol for the acidic active sites, and thus reduce the observed catalytic activity. If present in high quantities as an impurity in the methanol feedstock, water can additionally negatively influence the thermodynamic equilibrium as it is one of the reaction products, thus reducing single pass conversions.56,57 With this in mind, to maintain efficient and stable production of DME on an industrial scale, pre-treatment of the methanol feedstock will be required to remove any contaminants.
Kyrimis et al. have previously calculated that a CFD-optimised reactor could achieve lower pressure drops and higher productivity during methanol synthesis compared to a baseline reactor,30 demonstrating the ability of CFD to inform engineering decisions. Our CFD model could thus be used to inform larger scale pilot plant trials. Insights obtained from these trials, such as thermal management and reactor configuration constraints, could be fed back into our CFD model, further refining it. Combined with pilot plant trial data, the refined model could be used to support full commercialisation of the process. Given that the MTO reaction has been successfully commercialised over H-ZSM-5 and SAPO-34 catalysts, commercialisation of SAPO-11 for the sustainable production of DME is highly feasible and CFD models such as ours could be used to support this endeavour.
It is thus clear that CFD not only provides unique and complementary information to support experimental studies but can also be used to simulate reactions and rapidly screen different scenarios to gain knowledge which can be used to proactively design improved and energy efficient reactions, such as methanol dehydration over SAPO-11. Our developed modelling tools offer a valuable and accurate insight both for the fundamental understanding of the MTD reaction, and for the industrial practises necessary to optimise and scale-up this process. As discussed in Kyrimis et al.,30 optimisation of industrial processes can substantially support the transition towards carbon neutral fuels which is necessary in achieving ambitious climate strategies.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d5cy00062a |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2025 |