Valeriya Zarubina
University of Groningen
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Featured researches published by Valeriya Zarubina.
Catalysis Science & Technology | 2013
Christian Nederlof; Valeriya Zarubina; Ignacio Melián-Cabrera; Hero J. Heeres; Freek Kapteijn; Michiel Makkee
Commercially available γ-Al2O3 was calcined at temperatures between 500 and 1200 °C and tested for its performance in the oxidative ethylbenzene dehydrogenation (ODH) over a wide range of industrially-relevant conditions. The original γ-Al2O3, as well as η- and α-Al2O3, were tested. A calcination temperature around 1000/1050 °C turned out to be optimal for the ODH performance. Upon calcination the number of acid sites (from 637 to 436 μmol g−1) and surface area (from 272 to 119 m2 g−1) decrease, whereas the acid site density increases (from 1.4 to 2.4 sites per nm2). Less coke, being the active catalyst, is formed during ODH on the Al-1000 sample compared to γ-Al2O3 (30.8 wt% vs. 21.6 wt%), but the coke surface coverage increases. Compared with γ-Al2O3, the EB conversion increased from 36% to 42% and the ST selectivity increased from 83% to 87%. For an optimal ST selectivity the catalyst should contain enough coke to attain full conversion of the limiting reactant oxygen. The reactivity of the coke is changed due to the higher density and strength of the Lewis acid sites that are formed by the high temperature calcination. The Al-1000 sample and all other investigated catalysts lost ODH activity with time on stream. The loss of selectivity towards more COX formation is directly correlated with the amount of coke.
CrystEngComm | 2014
Lidia López Pérez; Consuelo Alvarez-Galvan; Valeriya Zarubina; Bruno O. Figueiredo Fernandes; Ignacio Melián-Cabrera
The preparation of a steam-based hydrothermally stable transition alumina is reported. The gel was derived from a synthetic sol–gel route where Al-tri-sec-butoxide is hydrolysed in the presence of a non-ionic surfactant (EO20PO70EO20), HCl as the catalyst and water (H2O/Al = 6); the condensation was enhanced by treating the hydrolysed gel with tetrabutylammonium hydroxide (TBAOH), after which it was dried at 60 °C by solvent evaporation. The so-obtained mesophase was crystallized under argon at 1200 °C (1 h) producing a transition alumina containing δ/α, and possibly θ, alumina phases. Due to its surface acidity, the pyrolysis conditions transform the block copolymer into a cross-linked char structure that embeds the alumina crystallites. Calcination at 650 °C generates a fully porous material by burning the char; a residual carbon of 0.2 wt.% was found, attributed to the formation of surface (oxy)carbides. As a result, this route produces a transition alumina formed by nanoparticles of about 30 nm in size on average, having surface areas in the range of 59–76 m2 g−1 with well-defined mesopores centered at 14 nm. The material withstands steam at 900 °C with a relative surface area rate loss lower than those reported for δ-aluminas, the state-of-the-art MSU-X γ-alumina and other pure γ-aluminas. The hydrothermal stability was confirmed under relevant CH4 steam reforming conditions after adding Ni; a much lower surface area decay and higher CH4 conversion compared to a state-of-the-art MSU-X based Ni catalyst were observed. Two effects are important in explaining the properties of such an alumina: the char protects the particles against sintering, however, the dominant effect is provided by the TBAOH treatment that makes the mesophase more resistant to coarsening and sintering.
Catalysis Science & Technology | 2014
Christian Nederlof; P. Vijfhuizen; Valeriya Zarubina; Ignacio Melián-Cabrera; Freek Kapteijn; Michiel Makkee
A packed bed microbalance reactor setup (TEOM-GC) is used to investigate the formation of coke as a function of time-on-stream on ?-Al2O3 and 3P/SiO2 catalyst samples under different conditions for the ODH reaction of ethylbenzene to styrene. All samples show a linear correlation of the styrene selectivity and yield with the initial coverage of coke. The COX production increases with the coverage of coke. On the 3 wt% P/SiO2 sample, the initial coke build-up is slow and the coke deposition rate increases with time. On alumina-based catalyst samples, a fast initial coke build-up takes place, decreasing with time-on-stream, but the amount of coke does not stabilize. A higher O2 : EB feed ratio results in more coke, and a higher temperature results in less coke. This coking behaviour of Al2O3 can be described by existing “monolayer–multilayer” models. Further, the coverage of coke on the catalyst varies with the position in the bed. For maximal styrene selectivity, the optimal coverage of coke should be sufficient to convert all O2, but as low as possible to prevent selectivity loss by COX production. This is in favour of high temperature and low O2 : EB feed ratios. The optimal coke coverage depends in a complex way on all the parameters: temperature, the O2 : EB feed ratio, reactant concentrations, and the type of starting material.
Journal of Molecular Catalysis A-chemical | 2014
Valeriya Zarubina; Christian Nederlof; B. van der Linden; Freek Kapteijn; Hero J. Heeres; Michiel Makkee; Ignacio Melián-Cabrera
Carbon | 2014
Valeriya Zarubina; Hesamoddin Talebi; Christian Nederlof; Freek Kapteijn; Michiel Makkee; Ignacio Melián-Cabrera
Chemistry of Materials | 2013
Lidia López Pérez; Valeriya Zarubina; Hero J. Heeres; Ignacio Melián-Cabrera
Applied Catalysis A-general | 2014
Christian Nederlof; Valeriya Zarubina; Ignacio Melián-Cabrera; Erik Heeres; Freek Kapteijn; Michiel Makkee
Catalysis Today | 2015
Lidia López Pérez; Valeriya Zarubina; Alvaro Mayoral; Ignacio Melián-Cabrera
Materials Letters | 2016
Lorena Falco; Mariana Van Den Tempel De Mendonca; Juan J. Mercadal; Valeriya Zarubina; Ignacio Melián-Cabrera
Catalysis Science & Technology | 2018
Ignacio Melián-Cabrera; Valeriya Zarubina; Christiaan Nederlof; Freek Kapteijn; Michiel Makkee