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CO(2) Hydrogenation over Nanoceria-Supported Transition Metal Catalysts: Role of Ceria Morphology (Nanorods versus Nanocubes) and Active Phase Nature (Co versus Cu)

In this work we report on the combined impact of active phase nature (M: Co or Cu) and ceria nanoparticles support morphology (nanorods (NR) or nanocubes (NC)) on the physicochemical characteristics and CO(2) hydrogenation performance of M/CeO(2) composites at atmospheric pressure. It was found that...

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Autores principales: Konsolakis, Michalis, Lykaki, Maria, Stefa, Sofia, Carabineiro, Sόnia A. C., Varvoutis, Georgios, Papista, Eleni, Marnellos, Georgios E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6955880/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31817667
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nano9121739
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author Konsolakis, Michalis
Lykaki, Maria
Stefa, Sofia
Carabineiro, Sόnia A. C.
Varvoutis, Georgios
Papista, Eleni
Marnellos, Georgios E.
author_facet Konsolakis, Michalis
Lykaki, Maria
Stefa, Sofia
Carabineiro, Sόnia A. C.
Varvoutis, Georgios
Papista, Eleni
Marnellos, Georgios E.
author_sort Konsolakis, Michalis
collection PubMed
description In this work we report on the combined impact of active phase nature (M: Co or Cu) and ceria nanoparticles support morphology (nanorods (NR) or nanocubes (NC)) on the physicochemical characteristics and CO(2) hydrogenation performance of M/CeO(2) composites at atmospheric pressure. It was found that CO(2) conversion followed the order: Co/CeO(2) > Cu/CeO(2) > CeO(2), independently of the support morphology. Co/CeO(2) catalysts demonstrated the highest CO(2) conversion (92% at 450 °C), accompanied by 93% CH(4) selectivity. On the other hand, Cu/CeO(2) samples were very selective for CO production, exhibiting 52% CO(2) conversion and 95% CO selectivity at 380 °C. The results obtained in a wide range of H(2):CO(2) ratios (1–9) and temperatures (200–500 °C) are reaching in both cases the corresponding thermodynamic equilibrium conversions, revealing the superiority of Co- and Cu-based samples in methanation and reverse water-gas shift (rWGS) reactions, respectively. Moreover, samples supported on ceria nanocubes exhibited higher specific activity (µmol CO(2)·m(−2)·s(−1)) compared to samples of rod-like shape, disclosing the significant role of support morphology, besides that of metal nature (Co or Cu). Results are interpreted on the basis of different textural and redox properties of as-prepared samples in conjunction to the different impact of metal entity (Co or Cu) on CO(2) hydrogenation process.
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spelling pubmed-69558802020-01-23 CO(2) Hydrogenation over Nanoceria-Supported Transition Metal Catalysts: Role of Ceria Morphology (Nanorods versus Nanocubes) and Active Phase Nature (Co versus Cu) Konsolakis, Michalis Lykaki, Maria Stefa, Sofia Carabineiro, Sόnia A. C. Varvoutis, Georgios Papista, Eleni Marnellos, Georgios E. Nanomaterials (Basel) Article In this work we report on the combined impact of active phase nature (M: Co or Cu) and ceria nanoparticles support morphology (nanorods (NR) or nanocubes (NC)) on the physicochemical characteristics and CO(2) hydrogenation performance of M/CeO(2) composites at atmospheric pressure. It was found that CO(2) conversion followed the order: Co/CeO(2) > Cu/CeO(2) > CeO(2), independently of the support morphology. Co/CeO(2) catalysts demonstrated the highest CO(2) conversion (92% at 450 °C), accompanied by 93% CH(4) selectivity. On the other hand, Cu/CeO(2) samples were very selective for CO production, exhibiting 52% CO(2) conversion and 95% CO selectivity at 380 °C. The results obtained in a wide range of H(2):CO(2) ratios (1–9) and temperatures (200–500 °C) are reaching in both cases the corresponding thermodynamic equilibrium conversions, revealing the superiority of Co- and Cu-based samples in methanation and reverse water-gas shift (rWGS) reactions, respectively. Moreover, samples supported on ceria nanocubes exhibited higher specific activity (µmol CO(2)·m(−2)·s(−1)) compared to samples of rod-like shape, disclosing the significant role of support morphology, besides that of metal nature (Co or Cu). Results are interpreted on the basis of different textural and redox properties of as-prepared samples in conjunction to the different impact of metal entity (Co or Cu) on CO(2) hydrogenation process. MDPI 2019-12-06 /pmc/articles/PMC6955880/ /pubmed/31817667 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nano9121739 Text en © 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Konsolakis, Michalis
Lykaki, Maria
Stefa, Sofia
Carabineiro, Sόnia A. C.
Varvoutis, Georgios
Papista, Eleni
Marnellos, Georgios E.
CO(2) Hydrogenation over Nanoceria-Supported Transition Metal Catalysts: Role of Ceria Morphology (Nanorods versus Nanocubes) and Active Phase Nature (Co versus Cu)
title CO(2) Hydrogenation over Nanoceria-Supported Transition Metal Catalysts: Role of Ceria Morphology (Nanorods versus Nanocubes) and Active Phase Nature (Co versus Cu)
title_full CO(2) Hydrogenation over Nanoceria-Supported Transition Metal Catalysts: Role of Ceria Morphology (Nanorods versus Nanocubes) and Active Phase Nature (Co versus Cu)
title_fullStr CO(2) Hydrogenation over Nanoceria-Supported Transition Metal Catalysts: Role of Ceria Morphology (Nanorods versus Nanocubes) and Active Phase Nature (Co versus Cu)
title_full_unstemmed CO(2) Hydrogenation over Nanoceria-Supported Transition Metal Catalysts: Role of Ceria Morphology (Nanorods versus Nanocubes) and Active Phase Nature (Co versus Cu)
title_short CO(2) Hydrogenation over Nanoceria-Supported Transition Metal Catalysts: Role of Ceria Morphology (Nanorods versus Nanocubes) and Active Phase Nature (Co versus Cu)
title_sort co(2) hydrogenation over nanoceria-supported transition metal catalysts: role of ceria morphology (nanorods versus nanocubes) and active phase nature (co versus cu)
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6955880/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31817667
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nano9121739
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