| Literature DB >> 29089587 |
Hyunwoo Ha1, Mi Yoo1, Hyesung An1, Kihyun Shin2,3, Taeyang Han1, Youhan Sohn1, Sangyeol Kim1,4, Sang-Ro Lee4, Jun Hyun Han5, Hyun You Kim6.
Abstract
We design a novel method for the CH4 reduction of SnO2 for the efficient recovery of Sn from SnO2 through a study combining theory and experiment. The atomic-level process of CH4-SnO2 interaction and temperature-dependent reduction behavior of SnO2 were studied with a combination of a multi-scale computational method of thermodynamic simulations and density functional theory (DFT) calculations. We found that CH4 was a highly efficient and a versatile reducing agent, as the total reducing power of CH4 originates from the carbon and hydrogen of CH4, which sequentially reduce SnO2. Moreover, as a result of the CH4 reduction of SnO2, a mixture of CO and H2 was produced as a gas-phase product (syngas). The relative molar ratio of the produced gas-phase product was controllable by the reduction temperature and the amount of supplied CH4. The laboratory-scale experimental study confirmed that CH4 actively reduces SnO2, producing 99.34% high-purity Sn and H2 and CO. Our results present a novel method for an efficient, green, and economical recycling strategy for Sn with economic value added that is held by the co-produced clean energy source (syngas).Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29089587 PMCID: PMC5663740 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-14826-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Theoretical prediction of the MR of SnO2. (a,b) Equilibrium concentration of the mixture of one kmole of SnO2 and n∙CH4 (n = 0~5, continuously increasing by a step of 0.01 kmole) at 1000 °C as a function of the amount of supplied CH4. (a) , (b) between CH4 and the pre-produced gas-phase products occur as the R ratio exceeds 0.62. (c) Temperature dependent reaction energies of two sets of mixtures of gas-phase molecules. The red solid symbols represent the reaction Gibbs free energy, ΔGr, for H2O + CO2 + 2CH4 → 5H2 + 3CO. The gas phase reaction becomes thermodynamically driven at above 632 °C. (d) Temperature dependent equilibrium relative concentration of a SnO2-CH4 mixture. The initial R value was set to 2.0. Theoretical maximum recovery of Sn was achieved at approximately 550 °C. Although the solid-state reduction of SnO2 to Sn was completed at 550 °C, the relative concentration of the gas-phase products varies as a function of temperature and converges at approximately 1000 °C.
Figure 2Energetics of SnO2 reduction by surface-bound CH4. (a) SnO2 (100) surface. (b) SnO2 (110) surface. On both SnO2 facets, formation of H2O was energetically preferred to H2. The red arrows present the preferred reaction pathway. E ad(CH4) represents the adsorption energy of CH4 on the SnO2 surfaces. ΔE of each step represents the energetic state of the current state relative to the previous state. For example, ΔE = 0.51 eV of S1 in (a) means that 0.51 eV of energy is required for CH3 dissociation from S0 to S1.
Figure 3Thermodynamic simulations of the Sn effect on the gas phase reactions. (a,b) Temperature dependent equilibrium concentration of gas phase species without Sn (a) and with Sn (b). The presence of metallic Sn does not significantly affect the transformation of H2O + CO2 + 2CH4 to 5H2 + 3CO. (c,d) Temperature dependent concentration of CH4 and decomposed products; H2 and C, without Sn (c) and with Sn (d). Metallic Sn accelerates thermal decomposition of CH4 into C and H2. The numbers in the parentheses represent the equilibrium concentration of CH4, C, and H2 at 550 °C, at which theoretical maximum recovery of Sn was achieved (see Fig. 1d).
Figure 4Experimental results of the CH4 reduction of SnO2. Photos of unreduced SnO2 powder (a) and CH4 reduced SnO2 (b). (c) and (d) show XRD spectra of unreduced SnO2 and reduced SnO2, respectively. XRD pattern in (d) demonstrates a typical case of β-Sn. The recovery rate of Sn was 79.9 %.
ICP-analyzed composition of the reduced Sn.
| Element | Sn | Sb | As | Cu | Fe |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Composition (at %) | 99.34 | 0.13 | 0.001 | 0.49 | 0.04 |
Molecular concentration of the gas-phase product from the CH4 reduction of SnO2 analyzed using gas chromatographya.
| Molecule | H2 b | COb | CO2 | CH4 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Concentration (%) | 83.9 | 14.0 | 1.7 | 0.4 |
aH2O was not analyzed.
bH2/CO = 5.99.