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CO<sub>2</sub>‐Hydrogenation to Methanol over CuO/ZnO Based Infiltration Composite Catalyst Spheres

Carl Fritsch, Jürgen Dornseiffer, Jule Blankenstein, Michael Noyong, Christian Groteklaes, Ulrich Simon

2024ChemCatChem10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Multiple active component catalysts for efficient conversion of CO 2 to Methanol (MeOH) are synthesized through coating γ‐Al 2 O 3 carrier spheres by incipient wetness impregnation method (IWI). The well‐known bimetallic Copper Oxide/Zinc Oxide (CuO/ZnO)is promoted in three steps, first by Cerium Oxide (CeO 2 ), then additionally with Zirconium Oxide (ZrO 2 ) and finally with Calcium Oxide (CaO) resulting in four carrier catalysts with high surface area and catalyst pore volume. Quaternary and quinary carrier catalysts promoted with moderate CeO 2 , ZrO 2 in the quaternary (20 % CZCZ) and additionally with CaO (20 % CZCZC) in the quinary catalysts demonstrate high CO 2 ‐conversion ratios (16.2 % and 18.7 %) and space time yields (0.51 and 0.47 g MeOH h −1 g Catalyst −1 ) at 5 MPa and 250 °C. The high conversion ratios (X CO2 ) and good methanol space‐time‐yields (STY MeOH ) are attributed to enhanced copper dispersion and several multi metal oxide component interactions essential to enhance CO 2 ‐activation and ‐conversion through the catalytic systems as well as very high overall surface area. Compared to related studies, the carrier catalysts show superior conversion rates, proving the effectiveness of the introduced multi‐component carrier catalyst and extending the understanding of infiltrate composites as possible large‐scale application alternatives to precipitated MeOH catalyst systems.

Topics & Concepts

Composite numberCatalysisInfiltration (HVAC)SPHERESMethanolMaterials scienceChemical engineeringComposite materialChemistryOrganic chemistryAstronomyEngineeringPhysicsCatalysts for Methane ReformingCatalytic Processes in Materials ScienceCarbon Dioxide Capture Technologies