| Literature DB >> 32054760 |
Youngdong Song1, Ercan Ozdemir2,3, Sreerangappa Ramesh2, Aldiar Adishev2, Saravanan Subramanian2, Aadesh Harale4, Mohammed Albuali4, Bandar Abdullah Fadhel4,5, Aqil Jamal4,5, Dohyun Moon6, Sun Hee Choi6, Cafer T Yavuz7,2,5,8.
Abstract
Large-scale carbon fixation requires high-volume chemicals production from carbon dioxide. Dry reforming of methane could provide an economically feasible route if coke- and sintering-resistant catalysts were developed. Here, we report a molybdenum-doped nickel nanocatalyst that is stabilized at the edges of a single-crystalline magnesium oxide (MgO) support and show quantitative production of synthesis gas from dry reforming of methane. The catalyst runs more than 850 hours of continuous operation under 60 liters per unit mass of catalyst per hour reactive gas flow with no detectable coking. Synchrotron studies also show no sintering and reveal that during activation, 2.9 nanometers as synthesized crystallites move to combine into stable 17-nanometer grains at the edges of MgO crystals above the Tammann temperature. Our findings enable an industrially and economically viable path for carbon reclamation, and the "Nanocatalysts On Single Crystal Edges" technique could lead to stable catalyst designs for many challenging reactions.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32054760 DOI: 10.1126/science.aav2412
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728