Fluid catalytic cracking II : concepts in catalyst design /
Saved in:
Imprint: | Washington, DC : American Chemical Society, 1991. |
---|---|
Description: | ix, 374 p. : ill. ; 24 cm. |
Language: | English |
Series: | ACS symposium series 452 |
Subject: | |
Format: | Print Book |
URL for this record: | http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/1338294 |
Table of Contents:
- Origin of Strong Acidity in Dealuminated
- Zeolite-Y Influence of Superacid Sites in Ultrastable Y Zeolites
- Characterization of Zeolite-Cracking Catalysts
- Increasing Motor Octanes by Using ZSM-5 in Catalytic
- Cracking: Riser Pilot Plant Gasoline
- Composition Analyses Modification of Fluid Catalytic
- Cracking Catalysis by the Addition of ZSM-5: Gasoline Over-Cracking
- Studies Hydrothermal Stability and Cracking
- Behavior of Silicoaluminophosphate
- Molecular Sieve-37 with Different Silicon Zeolites Octane
- Enhancement in Catalytic
- Cracking by Using High-Silica
- Zeolites Monitoring Fluid
- Cracking Catalyst Deactivation Profile by Equilibrium
- Catalyst Separation Translation of Laboratory Fluid
- Cracking Catalyst Characterization Tests to Riser Reactors
- Analysis of the Riser Reactor of a Fluid Cracking Unit: Model Based on Kinetics of Cracking and Deactivation from Laboratory Tests Fluid
- Cracking Catalyst Metals Passivation: Development and Application
- Selectivity of Silica-Alumina Matrices Solid-Solid
- Reaction Between Y-Zeolite and Vanadium Pentoxide
- Luminescence as a Probe of Metal Effects in Fluidized
- Cracking Catalysts Vanadium-Contaminated Aluminas and Aluminosilicate Gels: 15V NMR Spectroscopic
- Characterization Laser Raman and X-ray Photoelectron
- Characterization of V-Contaminated Components of Fluidized
- Cracking Catalystst Petroleum
- Cracking Catalyst Characterization: Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry
- Imaging Processing Methods Aluminum-Exchanged
- Sepiolite as a Component of Fluid
- Cracking Catalysts Long-Residue Processing in a Riser Pilot Plant
- Concepts for Future Residuum Catalyst
- Development Metal-Resistant Fluid
- Cracking Catalysts: Thirty Years of Research