In Situ Spectroscopic Characterization and Theoretical Calculations Identify Partially Reduced ZnO 1-x /Cu Interfaces for Methanol Synthesis from CO 2 .
Xinyu LiuJie LuoHengwei WangLi HuangShasha WangShang LiZhihu SunFanfei SunZheng JiangShiqiang WeiWei-Xue LiJunling LuPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2022)
The active site of the industrial Cu/ZnO/Al 2 O 3 catalyst used in CO 2 hydrogenation to methanol has been debated for decades. Grand challenges remain in the characterization of structure, composition, and chemical state, both microscopically and spectroscopically, and complete theoretical calculations are limited when it comes to describing the intrinsic activity of the catalyst over the diverse range of structures that emerge under realistic conditions. Here a series of inverse model catalysts of ZnO on copper hydroxide were prepared where the size of ZnO was precisely tuned from atomically dispersed species to nanoparticles using atomic layer deposition. ZnO decoration boosted methanol formation to a rate of 877 g MeOH kg cat -1 h -1 with ≈80 % selectivity at 493 K. High pressure in situ X-ray absorption spectroscopy demonstrated that the atomically dispersed ZnO species are prone to aggregate at oxygen-deficient ZnO ensembles instead of forming CuZn metal alloys. By modeling various potential active structures, density functional theory calculations and microkinetic simulations revealed that ZnO/Cu interfaces with oxygen vacancies, rather than stoichiometric interfaces, Cu and CuZn alloys were essential to catalytic activation.
Keyphrases
- room temperature
- reduced graphene oxide
- density functional theory
- visible light
- quantum dots
- molecular dynamics
- metal organic framework
- high resolution
- gold nanoparticles
- ionic liquid
- carbon dioxide
- light emitting
- molecular dynamics simulations
- highly efficient
- monte carlo
- risk assessment
- mass spectrometry
- solid state
- dual energy