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Symmetrical Exsolution of Rh Nanoparticles in Solid Oxide Cells for Efficient Syngas Production from Greenhouse Gases
- Source :
- ACS Catalysis, 10, 1278-1288
- Publication Year :
- 2020
-
Abstract
- Carbon dioxide and steam solid oxide co-electrolysis is a key technology for exploiting renewable electricity to generate syngas feedstock for the Fischer-Tropsch synthesis. The integration of this process with methane partial oxidation in a single cell can eliminate or even reverse the electrical power demands of co-electrolysis, while simultaneously producing syngas at industrially attractive H2/CO ratios. Nevertheless, this system is rather complex and requires catalytically active and coke tolerant electrodes. Here, we report on a low-substitution rhodium-titanate perovskite (La0.43Ca0.37Rh0.06Ti0.94O3) electrode for the process, capable of exsolving high Rh nanoparticle populations, and assembled in a symmetrical solid oxide cell configuration. By introducing dry methane to the anode compartment, the electricity demands are impressively decreased, even allowing syngas and electricity cogeneration. To provide further insight on the Rh nanoparticles role on methane-to-syngas conversion, we adjusted their size and population by altering the reduction temperature of the perovskite. Our results exemplify how the exsolution concept can be employed to efficiently exploit noble metals for activating low-reactivity greenhouse gases in challenging energy-related applications.
- Subjects :
- Materials science
Waste management
010405 organic chemistry
business.industry
Oxide
General Chemistry
Raw material
010402 general chemistry
01 natural sciences
Catalysis
0104 chemical sciences
Renewable energy
chemistry.chemical_compound
chemistry
Greenhouse gas
Carbon dioxide
Electricity
business
TP155
Syngas
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 21555435
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- ACS Catalysis, 10, 1278-1288
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....f74e20cbd374a69cb9b5bf194946f19d