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Eliminating carbon dioxide emissions at the source by the integration of carbon dioxide capture and utilization over noble metals in the liquid phase.

Authors :
Xie, Shaoqu
Zhang, Wanli
Jia, Chuhua
Ong, Scott Sergio Go
Zhang, Cheng
Zhang, Shicheng
Lin, Hongfei
Source :
Journal of Catalysis. Sep2020, Vol. 389, p247-258. 12p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

• Carbon dioxide (CO 2) capture and utilization (CCU) over noble metal catalysts. • Eliminating CO 2 emissions at the source. • Hydrogenation of amine captured CO 2 to methanol at <150 °C. • Intermediates include ethyl carbonate, formic acid, ethyl formate. • Methanol formation relies on synergy between noble metal and base. Carbon dioxide (CO 2) capture and utilization (CCU) offer a response to greenhouse gas emissions whereas they are often conducted separately, resulting in a high energy demand for the CO 2 separation process. The capture reagent chemically binds the CO 2 molecule, activating the stubborn CO 2 to a more active species. The direct conversion of the captured and activated CO 2 to the value-added chemicals will simplify the CO 2 utilization process, leading to a strong energy-saving effect by omitting the CO 2 separation process. In this paper, the commercial and the self-synthesized noble metal catalysts were evaluated in the hydrogenation of amine captured CO 2 in ethanol at 140–165 °C, which is demonstrated to produce the main product methanol in the presence of K 3 PO 4 or using MgO as a catalyst support. The Pd-based catalyst was superior to the Rh, Pt or Ru based catalyst in the hydrogenation of amine captured CO 2 towards methanol. The superior Pd/MgO catalyst was characterized by XRD, XPS, SEM, HRTEM, and DRIFTS analysis. NMR measurement and the ATR FTIR measurements were used to determine the initial intermediate to be ethyl carbonate. Mechanistic insight to the methanol formation indicates that the synergistic effect of Pd and a base cascaded the reactions: the reduction of ethyl carbonate to formic acid, the dehydration between formic acid and ethanol to form ethyl formate, and the hydrogenolysis of ethyl formate to methanol and ethanol. The ethyl formate intermediate was hydrogenated to methanol by Pd, wherein basic condition (K 3 PO 4 or MgO) was responsible for the activation of the carbonyl group of the ethyl formate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00219517
Volume :
389
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Catalysis
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
145412846
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jcat.2020.06.001