Pivotal Role of Ni/ZrO2 Phase Boundaries for Coke-Resistant Methane Dry Reforming Catalysts
Leander Haug, Christoph W. Thurner, Maged F. Bekheet, Kevin Ploner, Benjamin Bischoff, Aleksander Gurlo, Martin Kunz, Bernhard Sartory, Simon Penner, Bernhard Klötzer
Abstract
To identify the synergistic action of differently prepared Ni-ZrO2 phase boundaries in methane dry reforming, we compared an “inverse” near-surface intermetallic NiZr catalyst precursor with the respective bulk-intermetallic NixZry material and a supported Ni-ZrO2 catalyst. In all three cases, stable and high methane dry reforming activity with enhanced anticoking properties can be assigned to the presence of extended Ni-ZrO2 phase boundaries, which result from in situ activation of the intermetallic Ni-Zr model catalyst systems under DRM conditions. All three catalysts operate bifunctionally; methane is essentially decomposed to carbon at the metallic Ni0 surface sites, whereas CO2 reacts to CO at reduced Zr centers induced by a spillover of carbon to the phase boundaries. On pure bulk Ni0, dissolved carbon accumulates in surface-near regions, leading to a sufficiently supersaturated state for completely surface-blocking graphitic carbon segregation. In strong contrast, surface-ZrO2 modified bulk Ni0 exhibits virtually the best decoking and carbon conversion conditions due to the presence of highly dispersed ZrO2 islands with a particularly large contribution of interfacial Ni0-ZrO2 sites and short C-diffusion pathways to the latter.