2022 Annual Meeting
(319f) Solution Combustion Synthesis of Iron-Based Alumina Nanocomposites for Microwave-Assisted Thermocatalytic Dehydrogenation of Fossil Fuels
In the present work, the iron-based alumina nanocomposites were obtained by SCS using two different fuels (citric acid and glycine) and two different heating modes (a hotplate and a muffle furnace). The precursors/oxidizers were iron nitrate and aluminum nitrate. They were mixed with the fuel according to stoichiometry and dissolved in water. Heating the solution resulted in combustion synthesis. The products were characterized by X-ray diffraction analysis, Brunauer-Emmett-Teller surface area analysis, laser diffraction particle size analysis, scanning electron microscopy (SEM), and energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDS).
XRD analysis revealed phases of hercynite, with no significant effect of the heating mode. The fuel change slightly influences the XRD pattern: products obtained using citric acid have less-crystalline spectra. SEM-EDS of the products revealed flaky structures with increased concentrations of iron in several spots on the particle surface. The products obtained using citric acid as the fuel have a narrow particle size distribution as compared to those produced using glycine, independent of the heating mode. The specific surface area of iron-based alumina nanocomposites obtained by SCS was dramatically increased by using citric acid instead of glycine, and additionally by using a muffle furnace instead of a hotplate.
This material is based upon work supported by the Department of Energy under Award Number DE-FE0032086.