Literature DB >> 27708303

Cobalt carbide nanoprisms for direct production of lower olefins from syngas.

Liangshu Zhong1, Fei Yu1,2, Yunlei An1,2, Yonghui Zhao1, Yuhan Sun1,3, Zhengjia Li1,4, Tiejun Lin1, Yanjun Lin1, Xingzhen Qi1, Yuanyuan Dai1,5, Lin Gu6, Jinsong Hu5,7, Shifeng Jin6, Qun Shen1, Hui Wang1.   

Abstract

Lower olefins-generally referring to ethylene, propylene and butylene-are basic carbon-based building blocks that are widely used in the chemical industry, and are traditionally produced through thermal or catalytic cracking of a range of hydrocarbon feedstocks, such as naphtha, gas oil, condensates and light alkanes. With the rapid depletion of the limited petroleum reserves that serve as the source of these hydrocarbons, there is an urgent need for processes that can produce lower olefins from alternative feedstocks. The 'Fischer-Tropsch to olefins' (FTO) process has long offered a way of producing lower olefins directly from syngas-a mixture of hydrogen and carbon monoxide that is readily derived from coal, biomass and natural gas. But the hydrocarbons obtained with the FTO process typically follow the so-called Anderson-Schulz-Flory distribution, which is characterized by a maximum C2-C4 hydrocarbon fraction of about 56.7 per cent and an undesired methane fraction of about 29.2 per cent (refs 1, 10, 11, 12). Here we show that, under mild reaction conditions, cobalt carbide quadrangular nanoprisms catalyse the FTO conversion of syngas with high selectivity for the production of lower olefins (constituting around 60.8 per cent of the carbon products), while generating little methane (about 5.0 per cent), with the ratio of desired unsaturated hydrocarbons to less valuable saturated hydrocarbons amongst the C2-C4 products being as high as 30. Detailed catalyst characterization during the initial reaction stage and theoretical calculations indicate that preferentially exposed {101} and {020} facets play a pivotal role during syngas conversion, in that they favour olefin production and inhibit methane formation, and thereby render cobalt carbide nanoprisms a promising new catalyst system for directly converting syngas into lower olefins.

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Year:  2016        PMID: 27708303     DOI: 10.1038/nature19786

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


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9.  Trapping [PMo12O40]3- clusters into pre-synthesized ZIF-67 toward Mo x Co x C particles confined in uniform carbon polyhedrons for efficient overall water splitting.

Authors:  Congfang Chen; Aiping Wu; Haijing Yan; Yinglu Xiao; Chungui Tian; Honggang Fu
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