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Plasma-Induced Catalyst Support Defects for the Photothermal Methanation of Carbon Dioxide

The presence of defects in a catalyst support is known to benefit catalytic activity. In this work, a He-plasma treatment-based strategy for introducing and stabilising defects on a Ni/TiO(2) catalyst for photothermal CO(2) hydrogenation was established. The impact of pretreatment step sequence—whic...

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Autores principales: Jantarang, Salina, Ligori, Simone, Horlyck, Jonathan, Lovell, Emma C., Tan, Tze Hao, Xie, Bingqiao, Amal, Rose, Scott, Jason
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8347005/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34361399
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma14154195
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author Jantarang, Salina
Ligori, Simone
Horlyck, Jonathan
Lovell, Emma C.
Tan, Tze Hao
Xie, Bingqiao
Amal, Rose
Scott, Jason
author_facet Jantarang, Salina
Ligori, Simone
Horlyck, Jonathan
Lovell, Emma C.
Tan, Tze Hao
Xie, Bingqiao
Amal, Rose
Scott, Jason
author_sort Jantarang, Salina
collection PubMed
description The presence of defects in a catalyst support is known to benefit catalytic activity. In this work, a He-plasma treatment-based strategy for introducing and stabilising defects on a Ni/TiO(2) catalyst for photothermal CO(2) hydrogenation was established. The impact of pretreatment step sequence—which comprised He-plasma treatment and reduction/passivation—on defect generation and stabilisation within the support was evaluated. Characterisation of the Ni/TiO(2) catalysts indicated that defects created in the TiO(2) support during the initial plasma treatment stage were then stabilised by the reduction/passivation process, (P-R)Ni/TiO(2). Conversely, performing reduction/passivation first, (R-P)Ni/TiO(2), invoked a resistance to subsequent defect formation upon plasma treatment and consequently, poorer photothermal catalytic activity. The plasma treatment altered the metal-support interaction and ease of catalyst reduction. Under photothermal conditions, (P-R)Ni/TiO(2) reached the highest methane production in 75 min, while (R-P)Ni/TiO(2) required 165 min. Decoupling the impacts of light and heat indicated thermal dominance of the reaction with CO(2) conversion observed from 200 °C onwards. Methane was the primary product with carbon monoxide detected at 350 °C (~2%) and 400 °C (~5%). Overall, the findings demonstrate the importance of pretreatment step sequence when utilising plasma treatment to generate active defect sites in a catalyst support.
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spelling pubmed-83470052021-08-08 Plasma-Induced Catalyst Support Defects for the Photothermal Methanation of Carbon Dioxide Jantarang, Salina Ligori, Simone Horlyck, Jonathan Lovell, Emma C. Tan, Tze Hao Xie, Bingqiao Amal, Rose Scott, Jason Materials (Basel) Article The presence of defects in a catalyst support is known to benefit catalytic activity. In this work, a He-plasma treatment-based strategy for introducing and stabilising defects on a Ni/TiO(2) catalyst for photothermal CO(2) hydrogenation was established. The impact of pretreatment step sequence—which comprised He-plasma treatment and reduction/passivation—on defect generation and stabilisation within the support was evaluated. Characterisation of the Ni/TiO(2) catalysts indicated that defects created in the TiO(2) support during the initial plasma treatment stage were then stabilised by the reduction/passivation process, (P-R)Ni/TiO(2). Conversely, performing reduction/passivation first, (R-P)Ni/TiO(2), invoked a resistance to subsequent defect formation upon plasma treatment and consequently, poorer photothermal catalytic activity. The plasma treatment altered the metal-support interaction and ease of catalyst reduction. Under photothermal conditions, (P-R)Ni/TiO(2) reached the highest methane production in 75 min, while (R-P)Ni/TiO(2) required 165 min. Decoupling the impacts of light and heat indicated thermal dominance of the reaction with CO(2) conversion observed from 200 °C onwards. Methane was the primary product with carbon monoxide detected at 350 °C (~2%) and 400 °C (~5%). Overall, the findings demonstrate the importance of pretreatment step sequence when utilising plasma treatment to generate active defect sites in a catalyst support. MDPI 2021-07-28 /pmc/articles/PMC8347005/ /pubmed/34361399 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma14154195 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/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 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Jantarang, Salina
Ligori, Simone
Horlyck, Jonathan
Lovell, Emma C.
Tan, Tze Hao
Xie, Bingqiao
Amal, Rose
Scott, Jason
Plasma-Induced Catalyst Support Defects for the Photothermal Methanation of Carbon Dioxide
title Plasma-Induced Catalyst Support Defects for the Photothermal Methanation of Carbon Dioxide
title_full Plasma-Induced Catalyst Support Defects for the Photothermal Methanation of Carbon Dioxide
title_fullStr Plasma-Induced Catalyst Support Defects for the Photothermal Methanation of Carbon Dioxide
title_full_unstemmed Plasma-Induced Catalyst Support Defects for the Photothermal Methanation of Carbon Dioxide
title_short Plasma-Induced Catalyst Support Defects for the Photothermal Methanation of Carbon Dioxide
title_sort plasma-induced catalyst support defects for the photothermal methanation of carbon dioxide
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8347005/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34361399
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma14154195
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