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Título
Thermocatalytic CO2 Conversion over a Nickel-Loaded Ceria Nanostructured Catalyst: A NAP-XPS Study
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Ceria nanocubes
Nickel
CO2 hydrogenation;
Rare earth oxides
Near Ambient Pressure X-ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy (NAP-XPS)
Clasificación UNESCO
2303 Química Inorgánica
Fecha de publicación
2021
Editor
MDPI AG
Citación
Barroso-Bogeat, A., Blanco, G., Pérez-Sagasti, J.J., Escudero, C., Pellegrin, E., Herrera, F.C., Pintado, J.M. (2021). Thermocatalytic CO2 Conversion over a Nickel-Loaded Ceria Nanostructured Catalyst: A NAP-XPS Study, Materials, 14(4) pp 1-11. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma14040711
Resumen
[EN] Despite the increasing economic incentives and environmental advantages associated to
their substitution, carbon-rich fossil fuels are expected to remain as the dominant worldwide source
of energy through at least the next two decades and perhaps later. Therefore, both the control and
reduction of CO2 emissions have become environmental issues of major concern and big challenges
for the international scientific community. Among the proposed strategies to achieve these goals,
conversion of CO2 by its reduction into high added value products, such as methane or syngas, has
been widely agreed to be the most attractive from the environmental and economic points of view.
In the present work, thermocatalytic reduction of CO2 with H2 was studied over a nanostructured
ceria-supported nickel catalyst. Ceria nanocubes were employed as support, while the nickel phase
was supported by means a surfactant-free controlled chemical precipitation method. The resulting
nanocatalyst was characterized in terms of its physicochemical properties, with special attention
paid to both surface basicity and reducibility. The nanocatalyst was studied during CO2 reduction
by means of Near Ambient Pressure X-ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy (NAP-XPS). Two different
catalytic behaviors were observed depending on the reaction temperature. At low temperature, with
both Ce and Ni in an oxidized state, CH4 formation was observed, whereas at high temperature above
500 ºC, the reverse water gas shift reaction became dominant, with CO and H2O being the main
products. NAP-XPS was revealed as a powerful tool to study the behavior of this nanostructured
catalyst under reaction conditions.
URI
DOI
10.3390/ma14040711
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