C7
asphaltenes from Athabasca crude oil were hydrotreated using
a commercial NiW/Al2O3 catalyst and analyzed
using X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. Results showed that the catalyst
performed better in the removal of sulfur rather than nitrogen and
that sulfur concentration is higher at the surface in comparison to
the bulk structure. Moreover, the sample after reaction had a higher
oxygen content in comparison to the untreated asphaltene, indicating
poor hydrodeoxygenation performance of the catalyst in addition to
a higher reactivity toward atmospheric oxygen at the surface of the
asphaltene. The latter is proposed to arise once the layer of resin
covering the asphaltene is partially converted during the hydrotreating
process.
More than half of the total world oil reserves are heavy oil, extra heavy oil, and bitumen; however their catalytic conversion to more valuable products is challenging. The use of submicronic particles or nanoparticles of catalysts suspended in the feedstock may be a viable alternative to the conversion of heavy oils at refinery level or downhole (in situ upgrading). In the present work, molybdenum sulfide (MoS2) particles with varying diameters (10000–10 nm) were prepared using polyvinylpyrrolidone as capping agent. The prepared particles were characterized by DLS, TEM, XRD, and XPS and tested in the hydrodesulfurization (HDS) of a vacuum gas oil (VGO). A correlation between particle size and activity is presented. It was found that particles with diameters around 13 nm show double the HDS activity compared with the material with micrometric particle sizes (diameter ≈ 10,000 nm).
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