Adsorption and catalytic properties of sulfated aluminum oxide modified with cobalt ions
- Authors: Lanin S.N.1, Bannykh A.A.1, Vlasenko E.V.1, Krotova I.N.1, Obrezkov O.N.1, Shilina M.I.1
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Affiliations:
- Department of Chemistry
- Issue: Vol 91, No 1 (2017)
- Pages: 36-43
- Section: Chemical Kinetics and Catalysis
- URL: https://bakhtiniada.ru/0036-0244/article/view/169160
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1134/S0036024417010150
- ID: 169160
Cite item
Abstract
The adsorption properties of sulfated aluminum oxide (9% SO42-/γ-Al2O3) and a cobalt-containing composite (0.5%Сo/SO42-/γ-Al2O3) based on it are studied via dynamic sorption. The adsorption isotherms of such test adsorbates as n-hydrocarbons (C6–C8), benzene, ethylbenzene, chloroform, and diethyl ether are measured, and their isosteric heats of adsorption are calculated. It is shown that the surface sulfation of aluminum oxide substantially improves its electron-accepting properties, and so the catalytic activity of SO42-/γ-Al2O3 in the liquid-phase alkylation of benzene with octene-1 at temperatures of 25–120°C is one order of magnitude higher than for the initial aluminum oxide. It is established that additional modification of sulfated aluminum oxide with cobalt ions increases the activity of this catalyst by 2–4 times. It is shown that adsorption sites capable of strong specific adsorption with both donating (aromatics, diethyl ether chemosorption) and accepting molecules (chloroform) form on the surface of sulfated γ-Al2O3 promoted by cobalt salt.
Keywords
About the authors
S. N. Lanin
Department of Chemistry
Author for correspondence.
Email: SNLanin@phys.chem.msu.ru
Russian Federation, Moscow, 119991
A. A. Bannykh
Department of Chemistry
Email: SNLanin@phys.chem.msu.ru
Russian Federation, Moscow, 119991
E. V. Vlasenko
Department of Chemistry
Email: SNLanin@phys.chem.msu.ru
Russian Federation, Moscow, 119991
I. N. Krotova
Department of Chemistry
Email: SNLanin@phys.chem.msu.ru
Russian Federation, Moscow, 119991
O. N. Obrezkov
Department of Chemistry
Email: SNLanin@phys.chem.msu.ru
Russian Federation, Moscow, 119991
M. I. Shilina
Department of Chemistry
Email: SNLanin@phys.chem.msu.ru
Russian Federation, Moscow, 119991
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