NiO
and metal-promoted NiO catalysts (M-NiO, with a M/(M+Ni) atomic
ratio of 0.08, with M = Nb, Sn, or La) have been prepared, tested
in the oxidative dehydrogenation (ODH) of ethane, and characterized
by means of XRD, TPR, HRTEM, Raman, XPS, and in situ XAS (using H2/He, air or C2H6/He mixtures). The selectivity
to ethylene during the ODH of ethane decreases according to the following
trend: Nb–NiO ≈ Sn–NiO > La–NiO >
NiO,
whereas the catalyst reducibility (determined by both TPR and XAS
using H2/He mixtures) shows the opposite trend. However,
different reducibility and catalytic behavior in the absence of oxygen
(ethane/He mixtures) have been observed, especially when comparing
Nb- and Sn-promoted NiO samples. These differences can be ascribed
mainly to a different phase distribution of the promoter. The results
presented here are discussed in terms of the nature of active and
selective sites for ODH of ethane in selective and unselective catalysts,
but also the role of promoters and the importance of their phase distribution.
In the present article we show that, although the reflux method is not common for the synthesis of multicomponent MoVTeNbO catalysts, an optimized reflux synthesis of metallic precursors leads to...
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