Catalysis Science & Engineering, Poster
CE-168

Catalytic CO2 hydrogenation to methanol over encapsulated Cu/ZnO based catalysts: Synthesis, characterization and in situ mechanism determination

M. Zabilskiy1, M. Ranocchiari1, J. A. van Bokhoven1,2*
1Laboratory for Catalysis and Sustainable Chemistry, Paul Scherrer Institut, 5232 Villigen, Switzerland, 2Institute for Chemistry and Bioengineering, ETH Zurich, Vladimir-Prelog-Weg 1, 8093 Zürich, Switzerland

Combustion of carbonaceous fuels like coal, oil and natural gas cause atmospheric concentrations of CO2 to continue to rise. CO2 could be utilized as starting material in a catalytic process to produce valuable chemicals and fuels such as synthesis gas (CO and H2 mixture), oxygenates (alcohols, ethers), or hydrocarbons. The development of an appropriate heterogeneous catalyst that will actively and selectively convert mixtures of CO2 and H2 to methanol as a liquid fuel additive or surrogate, can significantly contribute to a more widespread large scale utilization of CO2 and renewable energy. The most active catalyst for methanol production is copper-zinc-based materials which are widely used for syngas transformation to methanol. These catalysts also show promising results in CO2 hydrogenation, however, their activity value is still far from commercial utilization and further catalyst improvement is still required [1-3].

The main goal of this research project was to investigate mechanism of direct selective hydrogenation of CO2 into CH3OH over Cu/ZnO based catalyst. During catalyst design, attention was focused on maintaining a high dispersion and intimate contact between Cu and ZnO phases for highest possible number of active sites and consequently highest activity. For this reason nanosized Cu/ZnO clasters were encapsulated into zeolite framework. CuO and ZnO phases were introduced by ion exchange and precipitation methods. Influence of precipitation agent (Na2CO3/Na2S) during preparation step was carefully investigated. It was found that precipitation with 0.05 M Na2CO3 results in superior catalytic properties. Furthermore, several zeolite structures (FAU and LTA) with different Si/Al ratio were investigated. Synthesized catalyst samples were further examined by a variety of relevant characterization techniques in order to determine their morphological and surface properties, as well as mechanism of CO2 hydrogenation to methanol. Accordingly to results of operando XRD investigation, encapsulation of CuO and ZnO into zeolite framework prevents nano-particles sinthering and aggregation during catalytic test. It was confirmed that reducibility of ZnO (operando XAS) and formation of Cu-Zn alloy (operando XRD) play a crucial role in investigated process. The higher the amount of reduced Zn0 species were presented in the catalyst during reaction conditions, the higher the overall activity and selectivity to methanol were.

[1] M. D. Porosoff, B. Yan, J. G. Chen, Energy Environ. Sci.,2016, 9, 62-73. 
[2] T. Lunkenbein, J. Schumann, M. Behrens, R. Schlögl, M. G. Willinger, Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 2015, 54, 4544-4548. 
[3] S. Kuld, M. Thorhauge, H. Falsig, C. F. Elkjær, S. Helveg, I. Chorkendorff, J. Sehested, Science 2016, 352, 969-974.