Synthesis of Monocarboxylic Acids via Direct CO2 Conversion over Ni-Zn Intermetallic Catalysts
- Authors
- Sibi, Malayil Gopalan; Verma, Deepak; Setiyadi, Handi Cayadi; Khan, Muhammad Kashif; Karanwal, Neha; Kwak, Sang Kyu; Chung, Kyung Yoon; Park, Jae-Ho; Han, Daseul; Nam, Kyung-Wan; Kim, Jaehoon
- Issue Date
- 2-Jul-2021
- Publisher
- AMER CHEMICAL SOC
- Keywords
- CO2; hydrogenation; acetic acid; propionic acid; Ni-Zn; intermetallic phase
- Citation
- ACS CATALYSIS, v.11, no.13, pp 8382 - 8398
- Pages
- 17
- Indexed
- SCIE
SCOPUS
- Journal Title
- ACS CATALYSIS
- Volume
- 11
- Number
- 13
- Start Page
- 8382
- End Page
- 8398
- URI
- https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/4730
- DOI
- 10.1021/acscatal.1c00747
- ISSN
- 2155-5435
- Abstract
- The direct conversion of CO2 to methane, gasoline-to-diesel range fuels, methanol, and light olefins using sustainable hydrogen sources is considered a promising approach for mitigating global warming. Nevertheless, the direct conversion of CO2 to high value-added chemicals, such as acetic acid and propionic acid (AA and PA, respectively), has not been explored to date. Herein, we report a Ni-Zn intermetallic/Zn-rich NixZnyO catalyst that directly converted CO2 to AA and PA with an overall selectivity of 77.1% at a CO2 conversion of 13.4% at 325 degrees C. The surface restructuring of the ZnO and NiO phases during calcination and subsequent reduction led to the formation of a Ni-Zn intermetallic on the Zn-rich NixZnyO phase. Surface-adsorbed (*CHx)(n) species were formed via the reverse water gas shift reaction and subsequent CO hydrogenation. Afterward, monocarboxylic acids were produced via the direct insertion of CO2 into the (*CHx)(n) species and subsequent hydrogenation. The synthesis of monocarboxylic acid was highly stable up to 216 h on-stream over the Ni-Zn intermetallic catalyst, and the catalyst maintained its phase structure and morphology during long-term CO2 hydrogenation. The high selectivity toward monocarboxylic acids and high stability of the Ni-Zn intermetallic demonstrated its high potential for the conversion of CO2 into value-added chemicals.
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