In chemistry and chemical engineering, catalysis is a process that uses an outside substance (the catalyst) to accelerate the rate of a chemical reaction through an uninterrupted and repeated cycle of elementary steps until the last step regenerates the catalyst in its original form. The catalyst is usually present in relatively small amounts and none of it is consumed in the process.[1] In the chemical process industries, catalytic processes are of great economic importance with the petroleum industry being the largest single user.
Many substances can act as catalysts, including: metals (in particular, transition metals), chemical compounds (e.g., metal oxides, sulfides, nitrides), organometallic complexes, and enzymes. Although a catalyst may be a gas, liquid or solid, most catalysts used in industrial chemical reactions are heterogeneous (see below) and are in the form of porous pellets. Since not all parts of a solid catalyst participate in the catalysis cycle, those parts that do participate are referred to as active sites. A single porous pellet may have 1018 active catalytic sites.[1]
This article does not discuss enzymatic or biochemical catalysis (for information on those types of catalysis, see the enzyme, biochemistry and organocatalysis articles).
Figure 1 depicts the steps in a typical catalysis cycle. As depicted, the reactant molecules A and B are reacted to yield a desired product P. The catalysis cycle starts with the bonding of reactant molecules A and B to the catalyst. In the figure the catalyst is shown as a small piece of solid (heterogeneous catalysis) to which A and B are adsorbed, but the catalyst can also be a compound C dissolved in the reacting mixture (homogeneous catalysis). In that case, A and B are temporarily chemically bound to C. A and B then react, while bound to the catalyst C, to yield product P which is also bound to C. In the last step, the catalyst C is regenerated by product P separating from it. By physical or chemical separation methods the desired product P is removed from the mixture. The regenerated catalyst C then begins the cycle again by bonding with two new reactant molecules. [2]
In chemistry, activation energy[4] is the energy that must be overcome in order for a chemical reaction to occur. Activation energy may also be defined as the minimum energy required to start a designated chemical reaction. It is denoted by Ea in units of kilojoules per mole (kJ/mol). It may be thought of as the energy barrier that must be overcome to start a chemical reaction. According to Arrhenius' theory the speed of reaction depends exponentially (very steeply) on the height of the energy (also known as transition) barrier. A small lowering of transition barrier can yield a drastic increase in speed.
For a chemical reaction to proceed at a reasonable rate, there should exist an appreciable number of reactant species (molecules, atoms, ions, etc.) with energy equal to or greater than the activation energy of the reaction, which means that the temperature of the reactants must be so high that enough of the reactant species have a thermal energy that is sufficient to overcome the barrier. The higher the temperature, the more molecules (or atoms, etc.) have this energy and will react, and the faster the reaction proceeds. That is, reaction speed is strongly (in fact exponentially) dependent on temperature.[3] A catalyst does not lower the activation energy for a reaction, instead it provides an alternative path for the reaction that has a lower activation energy. The catalyst changes the chemical kinetics of a reaction but not the chemical thermodynamics. The thermodynamic (Gibbs free) energy of the reactants and products is not affected by the presence of the catalyst.
Figure 2 depicts how a catalyzed reaction follows a lower activation energy path than the higher activation energy path followed by the same reaction when it is not catalyzed. Overall, both the catalyzed path and the uncatalyzed path have the same change in Gibbs free energy between the reactants and the reaction product.
The energy diagram in Figure 2 illustrates several important points:[2]
The term "turn over frequency" (TOF) is used quite commonly in the technical literature to characterize the activity of catalysts. However, the definition of TOF in the literature is not consistent and varies quite widely. For example, two of the definitions in the literature are (the first is often used for homogeneous and the second for heterogeneous catalysis):
In both of the above definitions, the unit of time is sometimes designated as an hour rather than a second.
Another catalytic activity term is the katal, an SI derived unit, which is used mostly in biochemistry to characterize the activity of enzymes.[6]
Catalysis can be categorized into two main types: heterogeneous and homogeneous. In heterogeneous catalysis, the catalyst is in one phase[7] while the reactants and products are in a different phase or, for some cases, two different phases. In homogeneous catalysis, the catalyst is in the same phase as the reactants and the products.[8]
Heterogeneous catalysis [8][9][10]
Typical examples of heterogeneous catalysis involve a solid catalyst with the reactants as either liquids or gases. Separation of the products from the catalyst is relatively easy. However, the catalyst in heterogeneous catalysis is often less selective than in homogeneous catalysis.
A few specific examples of heterogeneous catalysis are:[8][9][10]
Homogeneous catalysis [8][9][10]
Typical examples of homogeneous catalysis have the catalyst, reactant and products all present as a gas or contained in a single liquid phase. Separation of the products from the catalyst is relatively difficult. However, the catalyst in homogeneous catalysis is often more selective than in heterogeneous catalysis.
A few examples of homogeneous catalysts are:[8][9][10]
Promoters are substances, small amounts of which can increase the activity of a catalyst. For example, the activity of the iron (Fe) catalyst used in the Haber process for ammonia synthesis is increased by the addition of a small amount of potassium (K) as a promoter.
Small amounts of some substances can reduce the the activity a catalyst. If the reduction in activity is reversible, the substances are called inhibitors. If the reduction in activity is irreversible, the substances are called poisons.[11]
Inhibitors are sometimes used to increase the selectivity of a catalyst by retarding undesirable reactions. For example, the conversion of acetylene (C2H2) to ethylene (C2H4) by catalytic hydrogenation uses palladium as the catalyst and lead acetate (Pb(CH3COO)2) as the inhibitor. Without the partial deactivation of the catalyst by the inhibitor, the ethylene produced would be further hydrogenated to undesirable ethane.
As an example of the precautions taken to avoid catalyst poisoning, the expensive platinum (Pt) and rhenium (Re) catalyst in the catalytic reforming process for producing high-quality gasoline in petroleum refineries is subject to irreversible deactivation by sulphur, nitrogen and arsenic compounds. Because of that, the petroleum naphtha feedstocks to catalytic reformers are always processed for removal of such compounds prior to being fed to the reformers.
Petroleum refining
Chemicals and petrochemicals
Other
Catalysts had been used in the laboratory before 1800 by Joseph Priestly in England and by the Dutch chemist Martinus van Marum, both of whom made observations on the dehyrogenation of alcohol with metal catalysts. However, it seems that both of them regarded the metal merely as a source of heat.
These are some of the chemists whose work during the 1800's led to the development of the modern catalyst technology:[12][13]
From these early beginnings, large industries have arisen and a vast body of scientific information has been accumulated. The economic contribution from catalysis is as remarkable as the phenomenon itself. Four sectors of the world’s economy are petroleum, energy production, chemicals production, and the food industry; and they are all critically dependent on the use of catalysts. Estimates are that catalysis contributes to greater than 35% of global GDP; the biggest part of this contribution comes from the generation of high energy fuels which depend on the use of small amounts of catalysts in the world’s petroleum refineries.[22]