Microscopy Study of the Front and Back Sides of Platinum Catalyst Gauzes Used in Ammonia Oxidation Conference Abstracts
Conference |
The 16th European Microscopy Congress 2016 28 Aug - 2 Sep 2016 , Lyon |
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Source | European Microscopy Congress 2016: Proceedings Materials Science Oxide‐based, Magnetic and other Functional materials and Applications Compilation, 2016. 450 c. ISBN 9783527342976. |
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Output data | Year: 2016, Pages: 1106-1107 Pages count : 2 DOI: 10.1002/9783527808465.EMC2016.6781 | ||||
Tags | scanning electron microscopy, platinum gauzes, ammonia oxidation, catalytic etching | ||||
Authors |
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Affiliations |
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Funding (1)
1 | Federal Agency for Scientific Organizations | V.44.1.17. (0303-2014-0003) |
Abstract:
Ammonia oxidation with air on platinum catalyst gauzes is widely used in chemical industry for synthesis of nitric acid. It is well known that during this process the gauzes undergo deep structural rearrangement of surface layers (catalytic etching) leading to the platinum loss and catalytic activity decrease. To reveal the mechanism of the catalytic etching of platinum catalyst gauzes during the NH3 oxidation, we studied in detail the surface microstructure of the front and back sides of platinum catalyst gauzes used in ammonia oxidation. The platinum catalyst gauzes used in the study were made from a polycrystalline wire with d ≈ 82 μm with the chemical composition (in wt.%) 81% Pt, 15% Pd, 3.5% Rh and 0.5% Ru. A laboratory flow reactor made of quartz tube with the inner diameter of 11.2 mm was used at the feed (ca. 10% NH3 in air) flow rate 880-890 l/h, the gauze temperature 860±5 °C and total pressure ca. 3.6 bar. A pack of four gauzes was loaded into the reactor to maintain standard conditions of the catalytic process. The surface microstructure was studied using a scanning electron microscope (SEM) JSM-6460 LV (Jeol). Substantially different surface layer microstructure of the front and back sides of the polycrystalline wire in the first gauze relative to the gas flow after the treatment in the reactor at T ≈ 860 °C for 50 h in the reaction medium (ca.10% NH3 in air) was observed after the SEM study. SEM images of the wire surface for the front and
back sides of the gauze are shown in Figures 1 and 2, respectively. Images b and c in Figures 1 and 2 were
obtained from the central part of the wires shown in Fig. 1a and Fig. 2a, respectively. The SEM images
demonstrate that the front side of the wire was etched much more significantly than the back side due to the
strong effect of the gas feed on this side of the wire. The wire surface on the front side of the gauze was covered
by a continuous corrosion layer consisting of crystalline agglomerates with the sizes 5–15 μm separated by deep
voids with the width 1–10 μm (Fig. 1a). The agglomerates had different shapes, crystalline faceting and
contained through pores with the diameter 1–5 μm (Fig. 1b). The surface of these agglomerates consisted of
crystalline facets without large defects (Fig. 1c). On the surface of the wire from the back side of the gauze weak
etching was observed only at the wire interweaving places whereas the major part of the wire surface looked
relatively smooth (Fig. 2a). Granular structure with 1–13 μm grains (Fig. 2b) separated by grain boundaries
containing 200–400 nm pores was observed in the central part of the wire (Fig. 2a). Crystalline planes with the
height ~ 100 nm and many dark spots with the diameter 50–150 nm were observed on the surface of the grains
(Fig. 2c). Some of them had pyramidal shape resembling the shape of etching pits at the places where screw
dislocation exit to the surface. The concentration of these pits is 4.0 x 108
cm-2, which is close to the dislocation
density in platinum.
The obtained data indicate that the size of agglomerates on the front side of the gauze (5–15 μm) is close to
that of grains observed on the back side (1–13 μm). This result seems to suggest that the etching develops in the
course of gradual growth and transformation of the grains into crystalline agglomerates during the growth and
merging of etching pits at the grain boundaries. Through pores with the size of 1–5 μm inside the agglomerates
may be formed during merging of growing etching pits on the surface and in the bulk of the grains. The
emergence and growth of the pits can be related to the reaction of ammonia molecules with oxygen atoms
absorbed at the grain boundaries, dislocations and other surface defects. The reaction of gaseous NH3
molecules
with absorbed oxygen atoms Oabs with the formation of gaseous NO results in local overheating of the surface
initiating the release of metal atoms to the surface. Intense release of metal atoms from pits at the grain
boundaries forms extended voids between the grains. Metal atoms released from the defects quickly migrate
over the grain surface and are gradually incorporated at the energetically most favorable sites. As a result, the
grains are gradually reconstructed into faceted crystalline agglomerates with through pores formed due to the
growth and merging of pits. When these processes go on for a long time, a rough corrosion layer including
crystalline agglomerates with through pores separated by deep extended void is formed (Fig. 1).
Cite:
Salanov A.
, Suprun E.
, Sutormina E.
, Isupova L.
, Parmon V.
Microscopy Study of the Front and Back Sides of Platinum Catalyst Gauzes Used in Ammonia Oxidation
In compilation European Microscopy Congress 2016: Proceedings Materials Science Oxide‐based, Magnetic and other Functional materials and Applications. 2016. – C.1106-1107. – ISBN 9783527342976. DOI: 10.1002/9783527808465.EMC2016.6781 OpenAlex
Microscopy Study of the Front and Back Sides of Platinum Catalyst Gauzes Used in Ammonia Oxidation
In compilation European Microscopy Congress 2016: Proceedings Materials Science Oxide‐based, Magnetic and other Functional materials and Applications. 2016. – C.1106-1107. – ISBN 9783527342976. DOI: 10.1002/9783527808465.EMC2016.6781 OpenAlex
Identifiers:
OpenAlex: | W4256241519 |
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