Bulletin of the American Physical Society
74th Annual Gaseous Electronics Conference
Volume 66, Number 7
Monday–Friday, October 4–8, 2021;
Virtual: GEC Platform
Time Zone: Central Daylight Time, USA
Session SR51: Atmospheric and High Pressure Plasmas: Chemistry and Others
4:00 PM–5:45 PM,
Thursday, October 7, 2021
Room: GEC platform
Chair: Charles Durfee, Colorado School of Mines
Abstract: SR51.00001 : Plasma-catalytic hydrogenation of CO2: elucidating thermodynamically- or kinetically-limited step*
4:00 PM–4:30 PM
Presenter:
Tomohiro Nozaki
(Department of Mechanical Engineering, Tokyo Institute of Technology)
Author:
Tomohiro Nozaki
(Department of Mechanical Engineering, Tokyo Institute of Technology)
DBD (dielectric barrier discharge) combined heterogeneous catalytic reaction was employed to convert CO2 to CO at 5-10 kPa, known as Reverse Water Gas Shift (R-WGS) reaction (CO2 + H2 = CO + H2O|vapor: ΔH = 40.6 kJ/mol, ΔG = 24.4 kJ/mol at 400 K). The dependence of R-WGS on total pressure is negligible. The CO2 conversion at 650 K is promoted beyond thermal equilibrium when Pd2Ga/SiO2 (10wt%) alloy catalyst was used, while other catalysts (Pt3Mo/SiO2, Pd/SiO2) did not show synergism. Based on in situ transmission IR spectroscopy under the influence of DBD, together with DFT (density functional theory) analysis, the formation of monodentate formate (m-HCOO) was promoted by direct interaction between adsorbed hydrogen on Pd and bending mode vibrationally excited CO2 (Eley-Rideal mechanism). More interestingly, the dissociation of m-HCOO, which is known to be a rate-determining step, seems to be promoted by DBD. Such unique reaction behavior was also confirmed by the fluidized-bed DBD reactor, showing the activation energy of 81 kJ/mol for thermal catalysis and 47 kJ/mol for plasma catalysis. DFT analysis indicates the bidentate formate (b-HCOO) is quite stable thermodynamically and to be a spectator: b-HCOO was not decomposed even under the DBD condition which was confirmed by in situ IR spectroscopy. The individual role of DBD and alloy catalyst (or alloying multiple elements) yielding synergistic effect was clarified, enabling a new catalyst design suitable for plasma catalytic conversion of CO2.
*This work has been supported by JST CREST (JPMJCR19R3).
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