4.7 Article

Controlling carbon formation over Ni/CeO2 catalyst for dry reforming of CH4 by tuning Ni crystallite size and oxygen vacancies of the support

Journal

JOURNAL OF CO2 UTILIZATION
Volume 57, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jcou.2021.101880

Keywords

CO2 reforming of methane; Biogas; Nickel; Carbon formation; Particle size

Funding

  1. Coordenacao de Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de Nivel Superior (CAPES) [001]
  2. Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Cientifico e Tecnologico [CNPq -303667/2018-4, 305046/2015-2, 302469/2020-6, CNPq-SisNANO -442604/2019-0]
  3. FAPERJ [E-26/010.253/2016, E-26/202.783/2017]
  4. French government through the Programme Investissement d'Avenir [I-SITE ULNE/ANR16-IDEX-0004 ULNE]

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The study found that an increase in Ni crystallite size promotes the formation of carbon, but carbon deposition is negligible when the crystallite size is either small or large. Oxygen vacancies do not contribute to carbon removal from the Ni surface.
This work investigates the effect of Ni crystallite size and oxygen vacancies of the support on the formation of carbon over Ni/CeO2 catalysts for dry reforming of methane at 1073 K. A large crystallite size variation is achieved by using different Ni loading (5 and 10 wt%) and calcination temperatures (673, 873, 1073 and 1473 K). In situ XRD and XANES experiments reveal that the increase in calcination temperature increases the Ni crystallite size, whereas the amount of oxygen vacancies decreases. The amount of carbon formed during DRM increases as Ni crystallite size increases, achieving a maximum at around 20-30 nm and then, it continuously decreases. However, carbon deposition is negligeable below 10 nm and above 100 nm. For the catalysts with very large Ni crystallite sizes, the CH4 dissociation rate is likely so low that carbon species formed reacts and carbon accumulation does not take place. However, the oxygen vacancies of ceria do not contribute to the carbon removal from the Ni surface due to the low metal-support interface on these large Ni particles.

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