Publication | Closed Access
The Catalytic Synthesis of Hydrocarbons from Carbon Monoxide and Hydrogen
526
Citations
58
References
1976
Year
EngineeringGas ConversionChemistryChemical EngineeringPetrochemicalPetroleum ChemistryPetroleum ProductionSynthetic FuelHomogeneous CatalysisAlternative FuelFischer-tropsch Synthesis ReactionCrude Oil ImportsCatalysisHydrogenCatalytic ProcessCatalytic SynthesisGas ProductionMolecular CatalysisFuel ProductionCarbon Monoxide
Abstract The increasing demand for energy, coupled with the uncertainty and expense of crude oil imports, has renewed interest in the production of fuels and chemicals from hydrogen-deficient materials. These energy sources such as coal, residua, oil shale, and tar sands can be gasified with steam and oxygen to produce a gas containing large quantities of carbon monoxide and hydrogen. Once methane is removed from this CO/H2 mixture it is purified to remove S poisons and then reacted over a catalyst to produce a variety of organic products. The synthesis of hydrocarbon products, with the exception of methane, is commonly referred to as the Fischer-Tropsch synthesis reaction.
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