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Low-temperature catalytic decomposition of ethylene into h2 and secondary carbon nanotubes over Ni/CNTs
- Source :
- Applied Catalysis B: Environmental, Appl.Catal.B Environ.
- Publication Year :
- 2010
-
Abstract
- The present work reports on the production of H2 and secondary carbon nanotubes (CNTs) during catalytic decomposition of ethylene over a novel catalytic system, namely, nickel supported on carbon nanotubes (Ni/CNTs) at remarkably low-temperatures, e.g. 400 °C. A number of catalyst parameters were investigated, namely the chemical nature of support, the Ni metal loading (0.1-10 wt%), the nature of nickel metal precursor (organometallic vs. inorganic) used during catalyst synthesis, and the nature of transition metal used (e.g. Co, Fe, Cu, Ni). Among the different Ni/CNT supported catalysts investigated, 0.5 wt% Ni/Ros1-B1 (Ros1-B1 a commercial CNT) presented the highest activity in terms of H2 production (296 mol H2/gNi) and carbon capacity (3552 gC/gNi). In terms of transition metal used as active catalytic phase, the activity (moles H2 per gram of metal) was found to decrease in the order Co ≫ Fe > Cu. The activity of supported Ni and Co catalysts was found to strongly depend on the metal loading. The structural and morphological features of primary (catalytic support) and secondary carbon nanotubes produced during ethylene decomposition at 400 °C were studied using X-ray Diffraction (XRD), scanning electron microscopy (SEM), High-resolution Transmission Electron Microscopy (HRTEM), and X-ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy (XPS). The production of secondary carbon nanotubes at 400 °C was confirmed after using HRTEM and after a comparison with the primary carbon nanotubes of catalyst support was made. Different regeneration conditions (use of oxygen or steam) were investigated in order to remove by gasification the amorphous carbon deposited under reaction conditions. Oxygen appeared to be a better regeneration reagent than steam, where after ten consecutive reaction/regeneration cycles the 0.5 wt% Ni/Ros1-B1 catalyst showed high and stable activity with time on stream. © 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. 93 3-4 314 324 Cited By :14
- Subjects :
- Ethylene decomposition
HRTEM
Catalyst support
X ray photoelectron spectroscopy
Catalytic supports
High resolution transmission electron microscopy
Catalyst supports
Nickel alloys
law.invention
law
Nickel
Chemical nature
H2 production
General Environmental Science
Catalyst regeneration
Catalytic system
Morphological features
Organometallics
Transition metals
Insectivora
Structural metals
SEM
Engineering and Technology
Carbon nanotube supported catalyst
Scanning electron microscopy
Primary carbon
Environmental Engineering
Stable activity
X ray diffraction
Catalyst synthesis
Supported catalysts
Carbon nanotubes
chemistry.chemical_element
Mineralogy
Carbon nanotube
Time on streams
Catalysis
Ni metal
Ethylene
Transition metal
XPS
Low temperatures
Process Chemistry and Technology
Amorphous carbon
Reaction conditions
Metal loadings
Oxygen
Catalytic decomposition
chemistry
Chemical engineering
Co catalysts
Carbon
Metal precursor
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Applied Catalysis B: Environmental, Appl.Catal.B Environ.
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....0e9bb9dc4533a847ea6ea5cc4eb9e851