Equilibrium catalyst
Equilibrium catalyst usually refers to the catalyst mix use in fluid catalytic cracking, but includes other petrochemical processes that use large amounts of catalysts. The catalyst is a zeolite. During the FCC, the catalyst "inventory" is regularly removed from operation and reactivated by combusting the accumulated coke, which is a catalyst poison. Some of the catalyst is irreversibly deactivated by metal contaminants and by degradation of the alumino silicate backbone of the zeolite. To compensate for these changes, some inventory is removed and some fresh catalyst is added. Thus, the inventory consists of a catalytic particles with a range of activities. This mixture is referred to as the equilibrium catalyst. In addition to FCC, equilibrium catalyst concept applies to hydroprocessing and hydrocracking.