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An active, stable cubic molybdenum carbide catalyst for the high-temperature reverse water-gas shift reaction

Milad Ahmadi Khoshooei, Xijun Wang, Gerardo Vitale, Filip Formalik, Kent O. Kirlikovali, Randall Q. Snurr, Pedro Pereira‐Almao, Omar K. Farha

2024Science220 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Although technologically promising, the reduction of carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) to produce carbon monoxide (CO) remains economically challenging owing to the lack of an inexpensive, active, highly selective, and stable catalyst. We show that nanocrystalline cubic molybdenum carbide (α-Mo 2 C), prepared through a facile and scalable route, offers 100% selectivity for CO 2 reduction to CO while maintaining its initial equilibrium conversion at high space velocity after more than 500 hours of exposure to harsh reaction conditions at 600°C. The combination of operando and postreaction characterization of the catalyst revealed that its high activity, selectivity, and stability are attributable to crystallographic phase purity, weak CO-Mo 2 C interactions, and interstitial oxygen atoms, respectively. Mechanistic studies and density functional theory (DFT) calculations provided evidence that the reaction proceeds through an H 2 -aided redox mechanism.

Topics & Concepts

Water-gas shift reactionCatalysisCarbideCarbon dioxideMolybdenumActive carbonChemistryWater gasMaterials scienceInorganic chemistryMetallurgyOrganic chemistrySyngasEnvironmental scienceEnvironmental protectionCatalysts for Methane ReformingCarbon dioxide utilization in catalysisCatalytic Processes in Materials Science
An active, stable cubic molybdenum carbide catalyst for the high-temperature reverse water-gas shift reaction | Litcius