2016 AIChE Annual Meeting
(461g) Development of Catalysts for CO2 Hydrogenation to Olefins
Authors
One of the most difficult aspects of chemistry involving CO2 is not the catalytic activation, but the thermodynamic limitation of utilizing the highly stable molecule.[1] By coupling the endothermic reverse water-gas shift (RWGS) reaction with the slightly exothermic Fischer-Tropsch (FT) process, FT from CO2 and H2 (CO2-FT) becomes more favorable as higher chain compounds are formed.[1-2] However, high conversion of CO2 can only be achieved if the FT step is fast enough to overcome the thermodynamic limitation of RWGS, which is the main challenge for reactions involving CO2. Therefore, to effectively synthesize jet fuel from CO2 and H2, new catalysts must be identified which are active for both RWGS and FT.
Because the cost of catalysts for CO2 hydrogenation is also important, catalysts must be synthesized from low-cost materials. Mo2C/γ-Al2O3 is a promising catalyst because of the ease of synthesis, low-cost, high activity, and relatively low oxygen binding energy (OBE), which allows it to freely exchange oxygen with CO2. A previous study showed that Mo2C was active and selective for CO2 reduction into CO.[3] Mo2C also has a much lower OBE than other transition metal carbides (TMCs), which contributes to its high CO2 hydrogenation activity. By doping Mo2C with Fe, it is possible to further enhance the activity for FT, as Fe-based catalysts are highly active for olefin production through FT and CO2-FT.[4]
References
[1] K. Müller, L. Mokrushina, W. Arlt, Chemie Ingenieur Technik 2014, 86, 497-503.
[2] U. Rodemerck, M. Holeňa, E. Wagner, Q. Smejkal, A. Barkschat, M. Baerns, ChemCatChem 2013, 5, 1948-1955.
[3] M. D. Porosoff, X. Yang, J. A. Boscoboinik, J. G. Chen, Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2014, 53, 6705-6709.
[4] H. D. Willauer, R. Ananth, M. T. Olsen, D. M. Drab, D. R. Hardy, F. W. Williams, Journal of CO2 Utilization 2013, 3–4, 56-64.