AI Article Synopsis

  • Glycerol vaporization was studied over ceria catalysts with different shapes to see how these shapes affect the production of methanol, a bio-renewable fuel.
  • The cubic ceria catalyst showed lower methanol yields due to its low surface area and high acidity, while rodlike and polyhedral shapes performed significantly better, producing four times more methanol at 400 °C.
  • The research found that the best-performing catalysts also had a higher selectivity for hydroxyacetone, with implications for catalyst design in future bio-renewable energy solutions.

Article Abstract

Glycerol solutions were vaporized and reacted over ceria catalysts with different morphologies to investigate the relationship of product distribution to the surface facets exposed, particularly, the yield of bio-renewable methanol. Ceria was prepared with cubic, rodlike, and polyhedral morphologies via hydrothermal synthesis by altering the concentration of the precipitating agent or synthesis temperature. Glycerol conversion was found to be low over the ceria with a cubic morphology, and this was ascribed to both a low surface area and relatively high acidity. Density functional theory calculations also showed that the (100) surface is likely to be hydroxylated under reaction conditions which could limit the availability of basic sites. Methanol space-time-yields over the polyhedral ceria samples were more than four times that for the cubic material at 400 °C, where 201 g of methanol was produced per hour per kilogram of the catalyst. Under comparable glycerol conversions, we show that the rodlike and polyhedral catalysts produce a major intermediate to methanol, hydroxyacetone (HA), with a selectivity of 45%, but that over the cubic sample, this was found to be 15%. This equates to a 13-fold increase in the space-time-yield of HA over the polyhedral samples compared to the cubes at 320 °C. The implications of this difference are discussed with respect to the reaction mechanism, suggesting that a different mechanism dominates over the cubic catalysts to that for rodlike and polyhedral catalysts. The strong association between exposed surface facets of ceria to high methanol yields is an important consideration for future catalyst design in this area.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8154328PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acscatal.0c05606DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

rodlike polyhedral
12
surface facets
8
polyhedral catalysts
8
ceria
6
methanol
5
cubic
5
polyhedral
5
gas phase
4
glycerol
4
phase glycerol
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!