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Insight into the Nature of the ZnO(x) Promoter during Methanol Synthesis

[Image: see text] Despite the great commercial relevance of zinc-promoted copper catalysts for methanol synthesis, the nature of the Cu–ZnO(x) synergy and the nature of the active Zn-based promoter species under industrially relevant conditions are still a topic of vivid debate. Detailed characteriz...

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Autores principales: Dalebout, Remco, Barberis, Laura, Totarella, Giorgio, Turner, Savannah J., La Fontaine, Camille, de Groot, Frank M. F., Carrier, Xavier, van der Eerden, Ad M. J., Meirer, Florian, de Jongh, Petra E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2022
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9171830/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35692251
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acscatal.1c05101
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author Dalebout, Remco
Barberis, Laura
Totarella, Giorgio
Turner, Savannah J.
La Fontaine, Camille
de Groot, Frank M. F.
Carrier, Xavier
van der Eerden, Ad M. J.
Meirer, Florian
de Jongh, Petra E.
author_facet Dalebout, Remco
Barberis, Laura
Totarella, Giorgio
Turner, Savannah J.
La Fontaine, Camille
de Groot, Frank M. F.
Carrier, Xavier
van der Eerden, Ad M. J.
Meirer, Florian
de Jongh, Petra E.
author_sort Dalebout, Remco
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] Despite the great commercial relevance of zinc-promoted copper catalysts for methanol synthesis, the nature of the Cu–ZnO(x) synergy and the nature of the active Zn-based promoter species under industrially relevant conditions are still a topic of vivid debate. Detailed characterization of the chemical speciation of any promoter under high-pressure working conditions is challenging but specifically hampered by the large fraction of Zn spectator species bound to the oxidic catalyst support. We present the use of weakly interacting graphitic carbon supports as a tool to study the active speciation of the Zn promoter phase that is in close contact with the Cu nanoparticles using time-resolved X-ray absorption spectroscopy under working conditions. Without an oxidic support, much fewer Zn species need to be added for maximum catalyst activity. A 5–15 min exposure to 1 bar H(2) at 543 K only slightly reduces the Zn(II), but exposure for several hours to 20 bar H(2)/CO and/or H(2)/CO/CO(2) leads to an average Zn oxidation number of +(0.5–0.6), only slightly increasing to +0.8 in a 20 bar H(2)/CO(2) feed. This means that most of the added Zn is in a zerovalent oxidation state during methanol synthesis conditions. The Zn average coordination number is 8, showing that this phase is not at the surface but surrounded by other metal atoms (whether Zn or Cu), and indicating that the Zn diffuses into the Cu nanoparticles under reaction conditions. The time scale of this process corresponds to that of the generally observed activation period for these catalysts. These results reveal the speciation of the relevant Zn promoter species under methanol synthesis conditions and, more generally, present the use of weakly interacting graphitic supports as an important strategy to avoid excessive spectator species, thereby allowing us to study the nature of relevant promoter species.
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spelling pubmed-91718302022-06-08 Insight into the Nature of the ZnO(x) Promoter during Methanol Synthesis Dalebout, Remco Barberis, Laura Totarella, Giorgio Turner, Savannah J. La Fontaine, Camille de Groot, Frank M. F. Carrier, Xavier van der Eerden, Ad M. J. Meirer, Florian de Jongh, Petra E. ACS Catal [Image: see text] Despite the great commercial relevance of zinc-promoted copper catalysts for methanol synthesis, the nature of the Cu–ZnO(x) synergy and the nature of the active Zn-based promoter species under industrially relevant conditions are still a topic of vivid debate. Detailed characterization of the chemical speciation of any promoter under high-pressure working conditions is challenging but specifically hampered by the large fraction of Zn spectator species bound to the oxidic catalyst support. We present the use of weakly interacting graphitic carbon supports as a tool to study the active speciation of the Zn promoter phase that is in close contact with the Cu nanoparticles using time-resolved X-ray absorption spectroscopy under working conditions. Without an oxidic support, much fewer Zn species need to be added for maximum catalyst activity. A 5–15 min exposure to 1 bar H(2) at 543 K only slightly reduces the Zn(II), but exposure for several hours to 20 bar H(2)/CO and/or H(2)/CO/CO(2) leads to an average Zn oxidation number of +(0.5–0.6), only slightly increasing to +0.8 in a 20 bar H(2)/CO(2) feed. This means that most of the added Zn is in a zerovalent oxidation state during methanol synthesis conditions. The Zn average coordination number is 8, showing that this phase is not at the surface but surrounded by other metal atoms (whether Zn or Cu), and indicating that the Zn diffuses into the Cu nanoparticles under reaction conditions. The time scale of this process corresponds to that of the generally observed activation period for these catalysts. These results reveal the speciation of the relevant Zn promoter species under methanol synthesis conditions and, more generally, present the use of weakly interacting graphitic supports as an important strategy to avoid excessive spectator species, thereby allowing us to study the nature of relevant promoter species. American Chemical Society 2022-05-20 2022-06-03 /pmc/articles/PMC9171830/ /pubmed/35692251 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acscatal.1c05101 Text en © 2022 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Permits the broadest form of re-use including for commercial purposes, provided that author attribution and integrity are maintained (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Dalebout, Remco
Barberis, Laura
Totarella, Giorgio
Turner, Savannah J.
La Fontaine, Camille
de Groot, Frank M. F.
Carrier, Xavier
van der Eerden, Ad M. J.
Meirer, Florian
de Jongh, Petra E.
Insight into the Nature of the ZnO(x) Promoter during Methanol Synthesis
title Insight into the Nature of the ZnO(x) Promoter during Methanol Synthesis
title_full Insight into the Nature of the ZnO(x) Promoter during Methanol Synthesis
title_fullStr Insight into the Nature of the ZnO(x) Promoter during Methanol Synthesis
title_full_unstemmed Insight into the Nature of the ZnO(x) Promoter during Methanol Synthesis
title_short Insight into the Nature of the ZnO(x) Promoter during Methanol Synthesis
title_sort insight into the nature of the zno(x) promoter during methanol synthesis
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9171830/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35692251
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acscatal.1c05101
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