Propene poisoning on three typical Fe-zeolites for SCR of NO x with NH3: From mechanism study to coating modified architecture.

Abstract

Application of Fe-zeolites for urea-SCR of NO(x) in diesel engine is limited by catalyst deactivation with hydrocarbons (HCs). In this work, a series of Fe-zeolite catalysts (Fe-MOR, Fe-ZSM-5, and Fe-BEA) was prepared by ion exchange method, and their catalytic activity with or without propene for selective catalytic reduction of NO(x) with ammonia (NH(3)-SCR) was investigated. Results showed that these Fe-zeolites were relatively active without propene in the test temperature range (150-550 °C); however, all of the catalytic activity was suppressed in the presence of propene. Fe-MOR kept relatively higher activity with almost 80% NO(x) conversion even after propene coking at 350 °C, and 38% for Fe-BEA and 24% for Fe-ZSM-5 at 350 °C, respectively. It was found that the pore structures of Fe-zeolite catalysts were one of the main factors for coke formation. As compared to ZSM-5 and HBEA, MOR zeolite has a one-dimensional structure for propene diffusion, relatively lower acidity, and is not susceptible to deactivation. Nitrogenated organic compounds (e.g., isocyanate) were observed on the Fe-zeolite catalyst surface. The site blockage was mainly on Fe(3+) sites, on which NO was activated and oxidized. Furthermore, a novel fully formulated Fe-BEA monolith catalyst coating modified with MOR was designed and tested, the deactivation due to propene poisoning was clearly reduced, and the NO(x) conversion reached 90% after 700 ppm C(3)H(6) exposure at 500 °C.

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    Propene poisoning on three typical Fe-zeolites for SCR of NO x with NH3: From mechanism study to coating modified architecture.