Publication | Closed Access
Hydrogen Effects in Metal Catalysts
144
Citations
108
References
1983
Year
Materials ScienceChemical EngineeringHydrogen ProductionEngineeringCorrosionHydrogen EffectsChemical Process IndustryHydrogen Production TechnologyCatalysisHydrogenChemistryHydrogen GenerationCatalytic ReactionsChemical KineticsHydrogen Embrittlement
Abstract The interaction of hydrogen with metals is the cause or basis of a host of phenomena ranging from the chemisorption of hydrogen on the surface, its dissolution in the metal, catalytic reactions involving hydrogen as a reactant or as an astoichiometric component, etc., to the formation of metal hydrides. Hydrogen -induced corrosion and hydrogen embrittlement of steel are well known in chemical process industry and metallurgy. Catalytic reactions on metal or metal-oxide catalysts in the presence of hydrogen, often under pressure, are some of the major chemical, petroleum, and petrochemical processes of today, e.g., ammonia, methanol, Fischer-Tropsch, Oxo and other syntheses, hydrogenation of oils and fats, catalytic reforming, hydrode-sulfurization/hydrotreating, hydrocracking, and hydrogenation/ dehydrogenation.
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