A Direct Path from Methane to Methanol
Lehigh University , September 7, 2017 -- In
a study published today in Science, researchers from Lehigh and Cardiff University have demonstrated a promising
approach to using colloidal gold-palladium nanoparticles to directly oxidize
methane to methanol with high selectivity in aqueous solution at mild
temperatures.
Liquid methanol is widely
used as a feedstock for other chemicals and also has considerable potential as
an alternative fuel source. However, converting methane—the primary component
of abundant natural gas—into methanol is currently achieved by an indirect
process which requires high heat and pressure.
Now researchers have
discovered a new approach that allows the direct conversion of methane to
methanol utilizing molecular oxygen under much milder reaction conditions.
A team led by Graham J.
Hutchings at the Cardiff Catalysis Institute, and Christopher J.
Kiely at Lehigh, used colloidal gold-palladium (Au-Pd) nanoparticles to
directly oxidize methane to methanol with high selectivity in aqueous solution
at low temperatures. Their findings were published in a Science
article titled “Aqueous
Au-Pd colloids catalyze selective CH4 oxidation to CH3OH
with O2 under mild conditions.”
“Our work has shown that
if a stable supply of methyl radicals can be established—for example, by
incorporating a very small amount of hydrogen peroxide into the reaction
mixture—then the selective oxidation of methane to methanol using molecular
oxygen is entirely feasible,” said Kiely, the Harold B. Chambers Senior
Professor of Materials Science and Chemical Engineering.
This latest discovery has
been guided by Kiely’s and Hutchings’ longtime collaboration on developing
Au-Pd nanoparticles as effective catalysts for many other reactions.
According to Kiely, the
researchers were surprised to find that for this particular reaction to proceed
they needed the Au-Pd nanoparticles to exist as free-floating colloids in a
very weak hydrogen peroxide solution into which they injected pressurized
methane and oxygen gas.
“Usually when we use
Au-Pd nanoparticles as catalysts they are nearly always dispersed on high
surface area oxide supports such as titania,” said Kiely, who directs Lehigh’s Electron Microscopy and
Nanofabrication Facility.
“In this case however,
the presence of the ceramic support turned out to be highly detrimental.”
In the chemical industry
methane is currently converted indirectly to methanol via the production of
synthesis gas (carbon monoxide and hydrogen) at high temperatures and
pressures, which is an expensive and energy intensive process. The most
promising candidate processes discovered to date for the direct conversion of
methane to methanol have tended to be complex, inefficient, and often require
very high temperatures and aggressive reaction environments.
“The new simplified
approach we have demonstrated brings us a step closer to making the direct
conversion of methane to methanol a practically viable proposition,” said
Kiely.
In addition to Hutchings
and Kiely, the authors of the Science paper include Qian He, who earned
his Ph.D. in materials science and engineering from Lehigh in 2013 and is now a
University Research Fellow in the School
of Chemistry at Cardiff University ,
and Sultan Althahban, a Ph.D. candidate in materials science and engineering at
Lehigh.
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