Combining Atomic Layer Deposition with Surface Organometallic Chemistry to Enhance Atomic-Scale Interactions and Improve the Activity and Selectivity of Cu-Zn/SiO2 Catalysts for the Hydrogenation of CO2 to Methanol
Hui Zhou (ETH Zürich, Tsinghua University)
Scott R. Docherty (ETH Zürich)
Nat Phongprueksathat (TU Delft - ChemE/Catalysis Engineering)
Zixuan Chen (ETH Zürich)
Andrey V. Bukhtiyarov (Boreskov Institute of Catalysis SB RAS)
Igor P. Prosvirin (Boreskov Institute of Catalysis SB RAS)
Olga V. Safonova (Paul Scherrer Institut)
Atsushi Urakawa (TU Delft - ChemE/Catalysis Engineering)
Christophe Copéret (ETH Zürich)
Christoph R. Müller (ETH Zürich)
Alexey Fedorov (ETH Zürich)
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Abstract
The direct synthesis of methanol via the hydrogenation of CO2, if performed efficiently and selectively, is potentially a powerful technology for CO2 mitigation. Here, we develop an active and selective Cu-Zn/SiO2 catalyst for the hydrogenation of CO2 by introducing copper and zinc onto dehydroxylated silica via surface organometallic chemistry and atomic layer deposition, respectively. At 230 °C and 25 bar, the optimized catalyst shows an intrinsic methanol formation rate of 4.3 g h-1 gCu-1 and selectivity to methanol of 83%, with a space-time yield of 0.073 g h-1 gcat-1 at a contact time of 0.06 s g mL-1. X-ray absorption spectroscopy at the Cu and Zn K-edges and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy studies reveal that the CuZn alloy displays reactive metal support interactions; that is, it is stable under H2 atmosphere and unstable under conditions of CO2 hydrogenation, indicating that the dealloyed structure contains the sites promoting methanol synthesis. While solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance studies identify methoxy species as the main stable surface adsorbate, transient operando diffuse reflectance infrared Fourier transform spectroscopy indicates that μ-HCOO*(ZnOx) species that form on the Cu-Zn/SiO2 catalyst are hydrogenated to methanol faster than the μ-HCOO*(Cu) species that are found in the Zn-free Cu/SiO2 catalyst, supporting the role of Zn in providing a higher activity in the Cu-Zn system.