| Literature DB >> 35585339 |
Qi Dong1, Yonggang Yao1, Sichao Cheng2, Konstantinos Alexopoulos3,4, Jinlong Gao1, Sanjana Srinivas3, Yifan Wang3, Yong Pei5, Chaolun Zheng5, Alexandra H Brozena1, Hao Zhao6, Xizheng Wang1, Hilal Ezgi Toraman3,7, Bao Yang5, Ioannis G Kevrekidis8, Yiguang Ju6, Dionisios G Vlachos9, Dongxia Liu10, Liangbing Hu11,12.
Abstract
Conventional thermochemical syntheses by continuous heating under near-equilibrium conditions face critical challenges in improving the synthesis rate, selectivity, catalyst stability and energy efficiency, owing to the lack of temporal control over the reaction temperature and time, and thus the reaction pathways1-3. As an alternative, we present a non-equilibrium, continuous synthesis technique that uses pulsed heating and quenching (for example, 0.02 s on, 1.08 s off) using a programmable electric current to rapidly switch the reaction between high (for example, up to 2,400 K) and low temperatures. The rapid quenching ensures high selectivity and good catalyst stability, as well as lowers the average temperature to reduce the energy cost. Using CH4 pyrolysis as a model reaction, our programmable heating and quenching technique leads to high selectivity to value-added C2 products (>75% versus <35% by the conventional non-catalytic method and versus <60% by most conventional methods using optimized catalysts). Our technique can be extended to a range of thermochemical reactions, such as NH3 synthesis, for which we achieve a stable and high synthesis rate of about 6,000 μmol gFe-1 h-1 at ambient pressure for >100 h using a non-optimized catalyst. This study establishes a new model towards highly efficient non-equilibrium thermochemical synthesis.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35585339 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-04568-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962