[0001] This invention relates to a startup method for a hydrocarbon reforming process utilizing
a bed containing an iridium and a platinum group component reforming catalyst having
a substantially uniform sulfur distribution throughout the bed.
[0002] Reforming catalysts comprising an iridium component and a platinum group component
composited with a suitable refractory support are well known.
[0003] U.S. Patent 3,578,582 discloses sulfiding a reduced platinum- rhenium catalyst and
subsequently contacting the sulfided catalyst with hydrogen prior to introducing the
naphtha feed into contact with the catalyst.
[0004] Sulfiding a reduced tri-metallic reforming catalyst to incorporate low levels of
sulfur on the catalyst is also known. See, for example, U.S. Patent 3,936,369 wherein
the catalyst comprises iridium, germanium, and platinum or palladium and 0.05 to 0.5
weight percent sulfur; U.S. Patent 3,939,060 wherein the catalyst comprises iridium,
nickel, platinum or paladium and 0.01 to 1 weight percent sulfur; and U.S. Patent
4,082,651 wherein the catalyst comprises rhodium, rhenium and platinum or palladium
and 0.01 to about 1 weight percent sulfur.
[0005] Polymetallia cluster catalysts, including bimetallic cluster catalysts, comprising
an iridium component and a platinum group metal component are also known. See U.S.
Patent 3,953,368.
[0006] It has now been found that a startup method for an iridium and platinum group metal-containing
reforming catalyst at specified conditions will provide advantages that will become
apparent in the ensuing description.
[0007] In accordance with the invention there is provided, in a startup method for a reforming
process wherein a substantially sulfur-free hydrocarbonaceous feed is contacted under
reforming conditions in the presence of hydrogen with a bed of a fresh or regenerated
catalyst comprising metal components and a refractory support, said metal components
comprising an iridium component and at least one additional metal component selected
from ruthenium, rhodium, palladium, osmium, platinum, copper, silver and gold, said
fresh or regenerated catalyst having been reduced by contact with a reducing agent,
the method comprising the steps of: (a) contacting the reduced catalyst with a sulfiding
agent in a sulfiding zone to provide from 0.3 to 2.0 atoms or more of sulfur per atom
of said metal components, and subsequently (b) contacting the resulting sulfided catalyst
with a hydrogen-containing gas at a temperature in the range of from 900 to 950
oF. (482 to 510°C) until gas which has been passed in contact with the catalyst is
substantially free ofH2S whereby to produce a catalyst whose composition at all regions
of the zone is not outside the range of from 0.3 to 2.0 atoms of sulfur per atom of
said metal components, excess sulfur thereby having been removed from catalyst in
said sulfiding zone and said remaining sulfur being substantially uniformly distributed
throughout said bed prior to contacting said sulfided catalyst with said hydrocarbonaceous
feed.
[0008] The startup method of the present invention is suitable for use at the beginning
of a reforming process utilizing a fresh or a regenerated reforming catalyst comprising
an iridium component and at least one additional metal component.
[0009] The startup method of the present invention is particularly suited to start up a
naphtha hydroforming (reforming) process utilizing a substantially sulfur-free naphtha
feed that typically contains about 20 to about 80 volume percent paraffins, 20 to
80 volume percent naphthenes, and about 5 to about 20 percent aromatics, and boiling
at atmospheric pressure substantially between about 80 and 450°F., preferably between
150 and 375°F. By "substantially sulfur-free" is intended herein that the feed contains
less than about 25 wppm sulfur, preferably less than 10 wppm sulfur. A suitable feed,
as given above, is brought into contact with the pretreated reforming catalyst of
the present invention in the presence of hydrogen under conventional reforming conditions.
The reactions typically take place in the vapor phase at a temperature ranging from
about 650 to about 1000°F., preferably from about 750 to about 980°F. Reaction zone
pressures may vary from about 1 to about 50 atmospheres, preferably from about 5 to
about 25 atmospheres.
[0010] A naphtha feed stream is generally passed over the catalyst at space velocities ranging
from 0.5 to 20 parts by weight of naphtha per hour per part by weight of catalyst
(W/Hr/W), preferably from about 1 to 10 W/Hr/W. The hydrogen to hydrocarbon mole ratio
within the reaction zone is maintained between about 0.5 and 20, preferably between
1 and 10. During the reforming process, the hydrogen employed can be in admixture
with light gaseous hydrocarbons. Since the hydro-forming process produces hydrogen,
a recycle stream is employed for admission of hydrogen with the feed. In a typical
operation, the catalyst is maintained as a fixed bed within a series of adiabatically
operated reactors. Specifically, the product stream from each reactor, except the
last, in the reactor series is reheated prior to passage to the following reactor.
As an alternate to the above- described process sequence, the catalyst may be employed
in a moving bed in which the naphtha feed, hydrogen and catalyst are passed in parallel
to the reactor, or in a fluidized system wherein the naphtha feed is passed upwardly
through a turbulent bed of finely divided catalyst. The catalysts which find use in
the method of the present invention comprise a support and metal components consisting
of iridium and at least one additional metal component selected from the group consisting
of platinum group metals, copper, silver and gold. Most preferably, the catalytic
metal components consist of iridium and one additional metal component selected from
the group consisting of ruthenium, rhodium, palladium, osmium and platinum. Generally,
the iridium component is present in the catalyst in an amount ranging from about 0.01
to 3 weight percent and the additional metal component is present in an amount ranging
from about 0.01 to about 3 weight percent, said weights being calculated as if the
iridium component and the additional metal component were present in the elemental
metallic state, based on the total weight of the dry catalyst. The term "platinum
group" is used herein to refer to all the noble metals of Group VIII of the Periodic
Table of Elements as well as compounds and mixtures thereof. Platinum is preferred
as the platinum group component.
[0011] The support or carrier component of the catalyst used in the present invention is
preferably a porous adsorbent material having a surface area, as determined by the
Brunauer-Emmett-Teller (BET) method, of from about 20 to about 800, preferably from
about 100 to about 300 square meters per gram. The support material should be substantially
refractory at temperature and pressure conditions utilized in the reforming process.
Typical porous inorganic oxide supports are the naturally occurring aluminosilicates,
naturally occurring or synthetically prepared alumina, magnesia, silica-alumina, silica-zirconia,
silica-alumina- zirconia, silica-alumina-maqnesia and crystalline aluminosilicate
zeolites. The preferred catalyst supports are alumina and silica-alumina. The particularly
preferred catalytic support is alumina. Any of the forms of alumina suitable as supports
for reforming catalysts can be used. The catalyst may be promoted for reforming by
the addition of halides, particularly fluorides or chlorides. The halogen in the catalyst
may be present in an amount ranging from about 0.1 to about 3 weight percent, based
on the total weight of the catalyst. The halogen may be incorporated into the catalyst
at any suitable sta
qe in the catalyst manufacture, i.e., before, during, or after incorporation of the
catalytic metals onto the support material. Halogen may also be incorporated by contacting
the catalyst with a gaseous stream containing the halogens, generally chlorine.
[0012] A preferred catalyst for use in the present invention is a bimetallic cluster catalyst
having clusters of an average size of less than about 50 Angstroms, such as the catalysts
described in U.S. Patent 3,953,368. The preferred catalyst comprises metal components
and a refractory support. The metal components consist essentially of an iridium component
and at least an additional metal component selected from the group consisting of ruthenium,
rhodium, palladium, osmium, platinum, copper, silver and gold. More preferably, the
catalyst comprises a refractory support and an iridium component and a platinum component.
The iridium component may suitably be present in an amount of about 0.01 to 3 weight
percent, preferably from 0.1 to 1 weight percent, calculated as the metal, based on
the total dry catalyst. The platinum component may suitably be present in an amount
ranging from about 0.01 to 3 weight percent, preferably 0.1 to about 1, more preferably
0.15 to 0.5 weight percent, calculated as the metal, based on the total dry catalyst.
Additionally, a halogen component may be present in the catalyst, suitably in amounts
of about 0.1 to 3 weight percent, based on the total catalyst. In the preparation
of the preferred cluster catalyst, as taught in U.S. Patent 3,953,368, following the
impregnation of the support with the metal components, the catalyst is dried at temperatures
varying from 220 to 250°F. The catalyst may simply be dried in air at the above-stated
temperature or may be dried by treating the catalyst in a flowing stream of inert
gas or hydrogen. The drying step may be followed by an additional calcination step
at a temperature of about 500 to 700°F. Care must be taken to avoid contacting the
catalyst at temperatures in excess of 700 to 850°F. with air or other gas of high
oxygen concentration. Otherwise, large iridium oxide crystallites will be formed and
the desired metallic clusters will not be obtained on reduction. The catalyst is typically
reduced at a temperature of 500 to 1000°F. or higher with a hydrogen-containing gas
prior to use, for example, for a period of at least 0.1 hours.
/
[0013] In accordance with the present invention, the reduced catalyst is contacted with
a sulfiding agent for a time sufficient to provide from about 0.3 to about 2.0 atoms
of sulfur per atom of said metal components, preferably from about 0.1 to about 0.5
atoms of sulfur per atom of said metal components, that is, of the iridium plus at
least one of said metal components.
[0014] Contact of the catalyst with the sulfiding agent is suitably conducted at elevated
temperatures and pressures, suitably at a temperature ranging from about 75-to about
1000°F. and at a pressure ranging from about 20 to about 500 psig, with conventional
sulfiding agents such as hydrogen sulfide, precursors of hydrogen sulfide, carbon
disulfide, mercaptans, as is well known in the art. The sulfiding step is generally
conducted in the presence of hydrogen. After the catalyst has been sulfided for a
time sufficient to provide the desired low level of sulfur on the catalyst, the sulfided
catalyst is contacted with a hydrogen-containing gas at a temperature ranging from
about 900 to about 950°F., preferably at a temperature of at least 925°F. and a pressure
of about 20 to about 500
psig for a time sufficient to provide uniform distribution of the sulfur throughout
the catalyst bed and to remove the excess sulfiding agent from the sulfiding zone,
for example, for a period of at least about 0.5 hour, suitably for a time ranging
from about 0.5 to about 24 hours. The hydrogen utilized may be pure hydrogen but will
generally be a hydrogen stream containing some other gaseous components, for example,
the hydrogen-containing effluent gas produced in the reforming process.
[0015] The resulting catalyst is subsequently contacted with the hydrocarbonaceous feed
at reforming conditions.
EXAMPLE 1 (Using Prior Art Startup)
[0016] An experimental reforming run was performed utilizing a platinum-iridium-alumina
catalyst comprising 0.3 weight percent platinum and 0.3 weight percent iridium. The
hydrocarbonaceous feed used was a mixed naphtha which had an API gravity of 54.5 at
60°F., about 46 volume percent paraffins, about 43 volume percent naphthenes and the
balance being aromatics.
[0017] The startup procedure used was a prior art procedure. The catalyst was sulfided at
700°F. in a gaseous mixture comprising hydrogen and hydrogen sulfide. The resulting
catalyst comprised 0.1 weight percent sulfur, or expressed in terms of atomic ratio,
0.93 atom sulfur per atom of metal, after the treat. The conditions utilized during
the experimental run were 200 psig. 900°F. average catalyst temperature, a hydrogen-rich
gas recycle rate of 6000 SCF/B. The hydrocarbonaceous feed rate was adjusted to obtain
a product with a Research Octane number of 100.
EXAMPLE 2 (Using Startup of Present Invention)
[0018] Another experimental run was performed utilizing a platinum-iridium-alumina catalyst
comprising about 0.3 weight percent platinum and 0.3 weight percent iridium.
[0019] The hydrocarbonaceous feed used was a naphtha having the same proportions of constituents
and gravity as the feed used in Example 1.
[0020] The catalyst was pretreated in accordance with the startup procedure of the present
invention as follows: The catalyst was sulfided at 700°F. in a gaseous mixture comprising
hydrogen and hydrogen sulfide. Subsequently, the catalyst was heated in a hydrogen
stream at 950°F. until there were less than 2 volume ppm of the H
2S in the reactor effluent gas. This treatment left 0.029 wt. % sulfur, or expressed
another way, 0.27 sulfur atom per metal atom, on the catalyst.
[0021] The test conditions were 200 psig, 900°F. average catalyst temperature, a hydrogen-rich
gas recycle rate of 6000 SCF/B. The hydrocarbonaceous feed rate was adjusted to obtain
a product with a Research Octane Number of 100. Results of the comparative experiments
of Example 1 and Example 2 are summarized in Table I.

[0022] As can be seen from Table I, Example 2, which used the startup method of the present
invention, resulted in improved catalyst activity and activity maintenance.
EXAMPLE 3 (Comparative Example)
[0023] In this test, a platinum-iridium-alumina catalyst comprising about 0.3 wt. % platinum
and 0.3 wt. % iridium was sulfided according to a prior art method, in a gaseous mixture
comprising hydrogen and hydrogen sulfide at 700°F. Subsequently, the catalyst was
removed from the reactor and the sulfur level on the catalyst-was measured at various
points in the catalyst bed to determine the uniformity of the sulfur distribution.
The bed was divided into three equal parts and it was found that the inlet third of
the catalyst comprised 0.092 wt. % sulfur, the middle third comprised 0.054 wt. %
sulfur, and the outlet third comprised 0.048 wt. % sulfur. Thus, the sulfur was not
uniformly distributed and the average sulfur content for the catalyst bed was 0.065
wt. %, or expressed another way, it was 0.6 atom sulfur per atom of metal.
EXAMPLE 4
[0024] In this test a platinum-iridium-alumina catalyst comprising about 0.3 wt. % platinum
and 0.3 wt. % iridium was sulfided in accordance with the method of the present invention,
in a gaseous mixture comprising hydrogen and hydrogen sulfide at about 950°F., then
heated in a hydrogen stream until there were less than 2 vol. ppm of H 2S in the reactor
effluent gas. Subsequently, the catalyst was removed from the reactor and the sulfur
level on the catalyst was measured at various points in the catalyst bed to determine
the distribution of the sulfur. The catalyst bed was divided into three equal parts
and it was found that the inlet third of the catalyst comprises 0.033 wt. % sulfur,
the middle third comprised 0.04 wt. % sulfur and the outlet third comprised 0.037
wt. % sulfur. Thus, the sulfur on the catalyst bed was found to be evenly distributed
with the test run of Example 4 which was performed using the startup method of the
present invention. Furthermore, the average sulfur for the entire bed was 0.037 wt.
% or, expressed another way, it was 0.34 atom of sulfur per metal atom of the catalyst.
Moreover, the sulfur content of the catalyst of Example 4 was lower than the sulfur
content of. the catalyst of Example 3, which was the comparative prior art run.
EXAMPLE 5
[0025] A platinum-iridium-alumina catalyst comprising 0.3 wt. % platinum and 0.3 wt. % iridium
was sulfided in a gaseous mixture comprising hydrogen and hydrogen sulfide at 700°F.
for a time sufficient to deposit 0.07 wt. % sulfur on the catalyst. The catalyst was
then heated in a hydrogen stream and the hydrogen sulfide concentration in the reactor
effluent gas was monitored continuously. There was no detectable hydrogen sulfide
in the effluent gas until the temperature exceeded the temperature of 850°F. and there
was no significant detectable hydrogen sulfide in the effluent gas until the temperature
reached 900°F. The results of this test are summarized in Table II.

[0026] The data of Table II show that a critical temperature range is required to remove
the excess sulfur from the catalyst, said range being from about 900°F. to about 950°F.
Conversion of Units
[0027]
(1) Temperatures given in °F are converted to °C by substracting 32 and then dividing
by 1.8.
(2) Pressures given in psig (pounds/in2 gauge) are converted to kg/cm2 gauge by multiplying by 0.07031.
(3) Volumes (gas) in Standard Cubic Feet (SCF) are converted to litres by multiplying
by 28.32.
(4) Volumes (liquid) in barrels (B) are converted to litres by multiplying by 159.0.
1. A startup method for a reforming process wherein a substantially sulfur-free hydrocarbonaceous
feed is contacted under reforming conditions in the presence of hydrogen with a bed
of a fresh or regenerated catalyst comprising metal components and a refractory support,
said metal components comprising-an iridium component and at least one additional
metal component selected from ruthenium, rhodium, palladium, osmium, platinum, copper,
silver and gold, said fresh or regenerated catalyst having been reduced by contact
with a reducing agent, characterized in that it comprises the steps of:
(a) contacting the reduced catalyst with a sulfiding agent in a sulfiding zone to
provide more than 0.3 to 2.0 atoms of sulfur per atom of said metal components and,
subsequently,
(b) contacting the resulting sulfided catalyst'with a hydrogen-containing gas at a
temperature in the range of from 900 to 950 F. (482 to 510°C) until gas which has
been passed in contact with the catalyst is substantially free of H2S whereby to produce a catalyst whose composition at all regions of the zone is not
outside the range of from 0.3 to 2.0 atoms of sulfur per atom of said metal components,
and the ratio of atoms of sulfur to atoms of metal components is substantially uniform
in the zone prior to contacting said sulfided catalyst with said hydrocarbonaceous
feed.
2. The method of claim 1 characterized in that said reduced catalyst is contacted
with said sulfiding agent such as to provide from 0.1 to 0.5 atoms or more of sulfur
per atom of said metal components.
3. The method of claim 1 or claim 2 characterized in that said reduced catalyst is
contacted with said sulfiding agent in said sulfiding zone of step (a) in the presence
of hydrogen.
4. The method of any one of claims 1 to 3 characterized in that said catalyst is contacted
with an oxidizing gas at a temperature not greater than about 7000F prior to said reduction step.
5. The method of any one of claims 1 to 4 characterized in that catalyst is contacted
with said hydrogen-containing gas for a period of time of at least about 0.5 hour.
6: The method of any one of claims 1 to 5 characterized in that said catalyst is contacted
with said reducing agent at a temperature ranging from about 500 to about 700°F for
a time sufficient to reduce said metal components substantially to the corresponding
elemental metals.
7. The method of any one of claims 1 to 6 characterized in that said catalyst comprises
a halogen component.
8. The method of any one of claims 1 to 7 characterized in that said refractory support
is an inorganic oxide.
9. The method of any one of claims 1 to 8 characterized in that said metal components
are present as clusters having an average size not greater than about 50 Angstroms.
10. The method of any one of claims 1 to 9 characterized in that said catalyst comprises
bimetallic clusters consisting essentially of iridium and platinum dispersed on an
inorganic oxide support, said clusters having an average size not greater than about
50 Angstroms, said iridium being present in the total catalyst in an amount greater
than about 0.1 weight percent and said platinum being present in the total catalyst
in an amount ranging from about 0.1 to about 1 weight percent.