Water-Gas Shift and Steam Reforming Reactions Over a Rhodium Three-Way Catalyst

780199

02/01/1978

Event
1978 Automotive Engineering Congress and Exposition
Authors Abstract
Content
Under oxygen-deficient (rich) conditions, a potential route to maintaining control of carbon monoxide (CO) and hydrocarbon (HC) emissions in a three-way system is through reactions of these pollutants with water vapor (H2O). The importance of such reactions over supported rhodium was investigated in the laboratory. The water-gas shift (CO + H2O) was insignificant. Steam reforming (HC + H2O) took place, but gave CO as a product. Thus, if CO conversion governs the rich-side effectiveness of a three-way catalyst, steam reforming which converts HC to CO is unlikely, in itself, to improve three-way performance.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/780199
Pages
8
Citation
Schlatter, J., "Water-Gas Shift and Steam Reforming Reactions Over a Rhodium Three-Way Catalyst," SAE Technical Paper 780199, 1978, https://doi.org/10.4271/780199.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Feb 1, 1978
Product Code
780199
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English