Supporting data for "Catalysis-in-a-Box: Robotic Screening of Catalytic Materials in the Times of COVID-19 and Beyond"
2020-05-29
Loading...
Persistent link to this item
Statistics
View StatisticsCollection period
2018-03-01
2019-11-20
2019-11-20
Date completed
2020-05-05
Date updated
Time period coverage
Geographic coverage
Source information
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Title
Supporting data for "Catalysis-in-a-Box: Robotic Screening of Catalytic Materials in the Times of COVID-19 and Beyond"
Published Date
2020-05-29
Author Contact
Dauenhauer, Paul, J
hauer@umn.edu
hauer@umn.edu
Type
Dataset
Experimental Data
Experimental Data
Abstract
The emergence of a viral pandemic has motivated the transition away from traditional, labor-intensive materials testing techniques to new automated approaches without compromising on data quality and at costs viable for academic laboratories. Reported here is the design and implementation of an autonomous micro-flow reactor for catalyst evaluation condensing conventional laboratory-scale analogues within a single gas chromatograph (GC), enabling the control of relevant parameters including reactor temperature and reactant partial pressures directly from the GC. Inquiries into the hydrodynamic behavior, temperature control, and heat/mass transfer were sought to evaluate the efficacy of the micro-flow reactor for kinetic measurements. As a catalyst material screening example, a combination of four Brønsted acid catalyzed probe reactions, namely the dehydration of ethanol, 2-propanol, 1-butanol, and the dehydra-decyclization of 2-methyltetrahydrofuran on a solid acid HZSM-5 (Si/Al 140), were carried out in the temperature range 403-543 K for the measurement of apparent reaction kinetics. Product selectivities, proton-normalized reaction rates, and apparent activation barriers were in agreement with measurements performed on conventional packed bed flow reactors. Furthermore, the developed micro-flow reactor was demonstrated to be about ten-fold cheaper to fabricate than commercial automated laboratory-scale reactor setups and is intended to be used for kinetic investigations in vapor-phase catalytic chemistries, with the key benefits including automation, low cost, and limited experimental equipment instrumentation.
Description
Contains the raw files for experimental data collected on the reported micro-flow reactor along with .json files used for heat/mass transfer calculations on GradientCheck. Additionally, all editable .pptx files of final Schemes and Figures are included.
Referenced by
https://doi.org/10.26434/chemrxiv.11288885.v2
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.matt.2020.06.025
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.matt.2020.06.025
Related to
Replaces
item.page.isreplacedby
Publisher
Collections
Funding information
The Catalysis Center for Energy Innovation
item.page.sponsorshipfunderid
item.page.sponsorshipfundingagency
item.page.sponsorshipgrant
Previously Published Citation
Other identifiers
Suggested citation
Kumar, Gaurav; Bossert, Hannah; McDonald, Dan; Chatzidimitriou, Anargyros; Ardagh, Alexander M; Pang, Yutong; Lee, ChoongSze; Tsapatsis, Michael; Abdelrahman, Omar A; Dauenhauer, Paul. (2020). Supporting data for "Catalysis-in-a-Box: Robotic Screening of Catalytic Materials in the Times of COVID-19 and Beyond". Retrieved from the Data Repository for the University of Minnesota (DRUM), https://doi.org/10.13020/6jvw-kq77.
View/Download File
Content distributed via the University Digital Conservancy may be subject to additional license and use restrictions applied by the depositor. By using these files, users agree to the Terms of Use. Materials in the UDC may contain content that is disturbing and/or harmful. For more information, please see our statement on harmful content in digital repositories.