Login / Signup

Room temperature stable CO x -free H2 production from methanol with magnesium oxide nanophotocatalysts.

Zhengqing LiuZongyou YinCasandra CoxMichel BosmanXiaofeng QianNa LiHongyang ZhaoYaping DuJu LiDaniel G Nocera
Published in: Science advances (2016)
Methanol, which contains 12.6 weight percent hydrogen, is a good hydrogen storage medium because it is a liquid at room temperature. However, by releasing the hydrogen, undesirable CO and/or CO2 byproducts are formed during catalytic fuel reforming. We show that alkaline earth metal oxides, in our case MgO nanocrystals, exhibit stable photocatalytic activity for CO/CO2-free H2 production from liquid methanol at room temperature. The performance of MgO nanocrystals toward methanol dehydrogenation increases with time and approaches ~320 μmol g-1 hour-1 after a 2-day photocatalytic reaction. The CO x -free H2 production is attributed to methanol photodecomposition to formaldehyde, photocatalyzed by surface electronic states of unique monodispersed, porous MgO nanocrystals, which were synthesized with a novel facile colloidal chemical strategy. An oxygen plasma treatment allows for the removal of organic surfactants, producing MgO nanocrystals that are well dispersible in methanol.
Keyphrases
  • room temperature
  • ionic liquid
  • carbon dioxide
  • visible light
  • highly efficient
  • reduced graphene oxide
  • blood pressure
  • body mass index
  • drinking water
  • weight loss
  • gold nanoparticles
  • tissue engineering
  • energy transfer