Title of article
Base adsorption calorimetry for characterising surface acidity: a comparison between pulse flow and conventional “static” techniques
Author/Authors
S.P. Felix، نويسنده , , C. Savill-Jowitt، نويسنده , , D.R. Brown، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages
7
From page
59
To page
65
Abstract
A pulsed flow adsorption microcalorimeter (pulse-FMC) has been developed by modifying a Setaram 111. It is tested in comparison with a conventional pulsed static adsorption microcalorimeter (pulse-SMC) for characterising surface acidity of solid acid catalysts. Small pulses of 1% ammonia in helium are delivered to an activated catalyst sample and its surface acidity is differentially profiled in terms of the molar enthalpy of ammonia adsorption (image) using a combination of differential scanning calorimeter (DSC) and a downstream thermal conductivity detector (TCD). The pulsing action and its sequences are controlled by in-house developed software and the TCD output also is logged into a PC. Thus, the pulse-FMC is fully automated. Two sulfonated polystyrene resin-type catalysts, Amberlyst 15 and Amberlyst 35, a zeolite of the type H+-ZSM-5 (CT 410) and an acid activated clay (Fulcat 220) are characterised at appropriate temperatures using both the new technique and the conventional static base adsorption method. image versus surface coverage profiles of all the four catalysts obtained from both pulse-FMC and the conventional method are found to be comparable. Results are interpreted in terms of the extent to which NH3 adsorption on the catalysts surface is under thermodynamic control in the two methods.
Keywords
Base adsorption , Surface acidity , Pulsed-flow adsorption microcalorimetry , Static adsorption micro calorimetry , Solid acid catalysts
Journal title
Thermochimica Acta
Serial Year
2005
Journal title
Thermochimica Acta
Record number
1196902
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