Resumen:
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[EN] Direct hydrogenation of CO2 to valuable aromatics using multifunctional catalysts is an attractive technology to produce low-carbon footprint chemicals. In this work, the relevant zeolite parameters driving the formation ...[+]
[EN] Direct hydrogenation of CO2 to valuable aromatics using multifunctional catalysts is an attractive technology to produce low-carbon footprint chemicals. In this work, the relevant zeolite parameters driving the formation of total and BTEX aromatics from CO2 and H2 on tandem K-Fe/gamma-Al2O3+H-ZSM-5 catalysts following the FischerTropsch (FT)-mediated route were investigated. To this end, a set of H-ZSM-5 zeolites covering a wide range of physicochemical properties (density of Br phi nsted and Lewis acid sites, external acidity, crystallite size, and mesoporosity) was used, characterized by different techniques (ICP-OES, XRD, N2 physisorption, FTIR-pyridine, FTIR-2,6,-di-tert-butyl pyridine, XPS, 27Al MAS NMR, and electron microscopy), and evaluated in CO2 hydrogenation at 400 degrees C, 30 bar, H2/CO2 = 3.1, and GHSV of 4700 mL/(gFe-cat & sdot;h). At these conditions, high and stable CO2 conversions of 50 - 55% and low CO selectivity of ca. 10% were obtained for the Fe-based and tandem catalysts. The density and, to a certain extent, the strength of Br phi nsted acid sites were found the main parameters determining the selectivity of aromatics, reaching initial (TOS = 1.5 h) values of about 79% and 40% in liquid (C5+) and total hydrocarbons, respectively, for the catalyst based on the most acidic zeolite. Lewis acid sites associated to extraframework Al species (EFAL), by contrast, did not appear to play a relevant role in our conditions. Moreover, although a positive effect of the total amount and strength of Br phi nsted acid sites on the selectivity to the most valuable BTEX aromatics was inferred from our results, the external Br phi nsted acidity was the most influential factor in this case. Hence, a remarkable BTEX selectivity of 75% in aromatics was achieved for the zeolite previously submitted to a surface-passivation treatment by silylation.
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Agradecimientos:
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This work has received European Union's Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation funding under grant agreement No 838077 (eCOCO 2 project) . Funding by the Generalitat Valenciana through the Prometeo CIPROM/2022/10 project is ...[+]
This work has received European Union's Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation funding under grant agreement No 838077 (eCOCO 2 project) . Funding by the Generalitat Valenciana through the Prometeo CIPROM/2022/10 project is also acknowledged. This study was supported by MICIN with funding from European NextGenerationEU (PRTR-C17. I1) within the Green Hydrogen and Energy Program-CSIC and CSIC Interdisciplinary Thematic Platform (PTI +) Transicion Energetica Sostenible + (PTI-TRANSENER +) . We are grateful to Dr. S. Escorihuela, Dr. M. Navarro, and Dr. J.A. Vidal-Moya for their assistance in part of the experimental work. The authors are also thankful to the Microscopy Service of the Universitat Polite cnica de Valencia (UPV) .
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