Selective CO 2 methanation on Ru/TiO 2 catalysts: unravelling the decisive role of the TiO 2 support crystal structure

The catalytic hydrogenation of CO 2 is a relevant strategy for mitigating CO 2 emissions and its applicability relies on our ability to prepare catalysts that are highly active under mild conditions. Understanding and improving these tailored catalysts requires innovative materials synthesis routes...

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Veröffentlicht in:Catalysis science & technology 2016, Vol.6 (22), p.8117-8128
Hauptverfasser: Kim, A., Sanchez, C., Patriarche, G., Ersen, O., Moldovan, S., Wisnet, A., Sassoye, C., Debecker, D. P.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The catalytic hydrogenation of CO 2 is a relevant strategy for mitigating CO 2 emissions and its applicability relies on our ability to prepare catalysts that are highly active under mild conditions. Understanding and improving these tailored catalysts requires innovative materials synthesis routes and advanced methods of characterization. In this study, mono-dispersed 2 nm RuO 2 nanoparticles were prepared as a stable colloidal suspension and deposited onto different titania supports by impregnation. Supported RuO 2 nanoparticles are homogeneously dispersed at the surface of the titania supports. Then, upon annealing and reduction, metallic Ru nanoparticles are obtained, which are active in the hydrogenation of CO 2 to CH 4 . However, depending on the crystal structure of the different TiO 2 supports (anatase, rutile, and a mixture of both), the catalysts exhibited drastically diverse catalytic performances. An array of characterization tools (N 2 -physisorption, H 2 -chemisorption, HR-TEM, STEM-HAADF, 3D tomographic analysis, XRD, and XPS) was used to unravel the origin of this support effect. It appeared that catalytic behaviour was related to profound morphological changes occurring during the annealing step. In particular, advanced electron microscopy techniques allow visualisation of the consequences of RuO 2 nanoparticle mobility onto titania. It is shown that RuO 2 sinters heavily on anatase TiO 2 , but spreads and forms epitaxial layers onto rutile TiO 2 . On anatase, large Ru chunks are finally obtained. On rutile, the formation of a particular “rutile-TiO 2 /RuO 2 /rutile-TiO 2 sandwich structure” is demonstrated. These phenomena – along with the relative thermal instability of the supports – explain why the catalysts based on the commercial P25 titania support outperform those based on pure crystalline titania. The study opens new perspectives for the design of highly active CO 2 methanation catalysts.
ISSN:2044-4753
2044-4761
DOI:10.1039/C6CY01677D