Effect of boron on the sulfur poisoning of Co/TiO2 Fischer–Tropsch catalysts

Abstract TiO2 was treated with boron (0.05, 0.1%; boric acid source) to give B/TiO2. Co(NO3)2·6H2O (10% Co) was then added to both TiO2 and B/TiO2 (incipient wetness) and the materials were then sulfided with 100, 200 and 500 ppm (NH4)2S. The sulfided Co/TiO2 catalysts with and without boron were characterised by TPR and O2 titration and evaluated for Fischer–Tropsch synthesis. Low-level sulfur addition (100, 200 ppm S) did not significantly influence the activity and selectivity of the catalysts. The addition of a higher-level loading of sulfur (500 ppm S) resulted in severe sulfur poisoning of catalysts (80% decrease in reaction rate), but the modification of Co/TiO2 by boron retarded this poisoning (35% decrease in reaction rate). A shift in the product distribution to light molecular weight hydrocarbons (α=0.32) was observed for the 500 ppm S loaded catalyst (no boron addition) while boron addition retarded this shift (α=0.47). The effect of boron on the sulfur poisoning resistance of the Co/TiO2 catalysts is discussed.