Hello everyone! I've been interested in gas-phase/heterogeneous catalysis for a LONG time now, and interested in home chemistry even longer than that (rough estimate...8 years?). Anyhow, on to the problem.
I am looking for a good, reproducible catalyst support for heterogeneous catalysis. Previously, I have used activated carbon (easy to make with a little ingenuity). However, with my latest project this is not an option. My next project is the Haber process and therefore, I can not use carbon, or for that matter any hydrogenation synthesis (generation of methane). Also, the reactor materials change under such conditions as well. I'm using the ol' "gun barrel" method for the reactor, but now the catalyst is the next question. I know alumina is a very interesting support for this, but I would like options before anything else. Has anyone tried any luck with ceramic supports?
This post isn't in the chemical engineering forum because this is my home lab that I'm developing these machines.
Thank you,
Cobrasniper555