Efficient catalyst for the light-driven methanation of CO2
From:
Wiley
November 17, 2021 -- Recycling carbon
dioxide (CO2), especially through conversion to methane (CH4),
is compelling while anthropogenic CO2 emissions are still
rising. A useful process for this transformation is photothermal methanation,
in which CO2 and hydrogen are catalytically converted into CH4 and
water upon irradiation with sunlight. In the journal Angewandte Chemie,
a team of researchers has now reported the synthesis of a highly active,
stable, nickel-carbon catalyst for this reaction.
The team led by Luis Garzón-Tovar and
Jorge Gascon at King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (Thuwal,
Saudi Arabia) was looking for an efficient, economical catalyst for the
photothermal methanation of CO2. Photothermal catalysis is based on
the combination of light-driven and thermal chemical processes. In contrast to
pure photocatalysis, it has the advantage of allowing longer wavelength light
in the visible and IR regions of the spectrum to contribute to driving the
reaction.
Instead of precious metals, they sought
to base the new catalyst on an abundant, inexpensive metal, and chose to use a
high load of nickel nanoparticles on a carbon-based support. Carbon materials
are highly promising supports for photothermal catalysis because they absorb a
broad spectrum of light, are highly efficient in converting light into heat
energy, and have a large surface area.
The team used a nickel-containing
metal-organic framework (Ni-MOF-74) as their starting material for producing
the catalyst. Controlled pyrolysis of this material at 600°C proved to be
optimal. The Ni-MOF-74 decomposes to form uniform finely distributed nickel
nanoparticles embedded in a porous graphitic carbon matrix. The resulting
material, named Ni@C, demonstrated a high rate of conversion and high
selectivity for methanation under artificial UV, visible, and IR light. In a
continuous process in a flow-type reactor, the efficiency of the catalyst remained
stable over a period of more than 12 hours.
To demonstrate the practical application
of this system, an experiment was run outside, under natural sunlight, proving
the potential of this new catalyst to reduce CO2 to CH4 using
solar energy.
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2021/11/211117100104.htm
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