4.6 Article

Design of highly active cobalt catalysts for CO2 hydrogenation via the tailoring of surface orientation of nanostructures

Journal

CATALYSIS SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 9, Issue 8, Pages 1970-1978

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c9cy00402e

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Funding

  1. South Carolina Center of Economic Excellence for Strategic Approaches to the Generation of Electricity
  2. US National Science Foundation [DGE 1250052, EEC 1358931]

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The synthesis of nanomaterials with well-controlled morphologies and surface orientations has opened new avenues towards increasing catalytic performance and understanding of fundamental catalytic pathways. Here, we illustrate how tailoring surface orientations of Co3O4 catalysts on the nanoscale results in control over catalytic performance via the preferential formation of active surface species during CO2 hydrogenation. This results in a significant increase in the methane yield on Co3O4 nanorods, as opposed to conventional nanoparticle catalysts, where Co3O4 nanorods inhibit the formation of formate spectator species via the preferential formation of bridged CO as an intermediate species. This design approach provides a new dimension for the development of next generation catalysts and opens new, more efficient strategies for the conversion of carbon dioxide into useful hydrocarbons.

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