| Literature DB >> 31063372 |
Chengtao Wang1, Erjia Guan, Liang Wang2, Xuefeng Chu3, Zhiyi Wu4, Jian Zhang4, Zhiyuan Yang1, Yiwen Jiang1, Ling Zhang1, Xiangju Meng1, Bruce C Gates, Feng-Shou Xiao2,1,4.
Abstract
Supported rhodium nanoparticles (NPs) are well-known for catalyzing methanation in CO2 hydrogenation. Now we demonstrate that the selectivity in this process can be optimized for CO production by choice of molecular sieve crystals as supports. The NPs are enveloped within the crystals with controlled nanopore environments that allow tuning of the catalytic selectivity to minimize methanation and favor the reverse water-gas shift reaction. Pure silica MFI (S-1)-fixed rhodium NPs exhibited maximized CO selectivity at high CO2 conversions, whereas aluminosilicate MFI zeolite-supported rhodium NPs displayed high methane selectivity under the equivalent conditions. Strong correlations were observed between the nanoporous environment and catalytic selectivity, indicating that S-1 minimizes hydrogen spillover and favors fast desorption of CO to limit deep hydrogenation. Materials in this class appear to offer appealing opportunities for tailoring selective supported catalysts for a variety of reactions.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31063372 DOI: 10.1021/jacs.9b01555
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Chem Soc ISSN: 0002-7863 Impact factor: 15.419