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  5. Multifunctionalized zirconium-based MOF as a novel support for dispersed copper: Application in CO2 adsorption and catalytic conversion
 
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Multifunctionalized zirconium-based MOF as a novel support for dispersed copper: Application in CO2 adsorption and catalytic conversion

Author(s)
Rosado, Albert  
Popa, Ioana  
Abo Markeb, Ahmad  
Naughton, Eva  
Eckhardt, Hans  
Negahdar, Leila  
et al.  
Uri
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/31075
Date Issued
2024-07-19
Date Available
2026-01-21T15:45:07Z
Abstract
CO2 conversion and utilization for global sustainability is an integral part of greenhouse gases management, typically for the production of fuels and specialty chemicals. Added value products, such as methanol, methane or formate, can be obtained by electrocatalysis and thermocatalysis, the two techniques addressed in this study. The main motivation of this study is to develop a copper based catalyst active in both processes, confronting the main concerns regarding typical metal catalysts related to nanoparticles aggregation and concomitant deactivation. For this, modified NU-1000, a water-stable mesoporous MOF, is used as a platform for the simultaneous coordination–stabilization of copper single atoms and CO2 adsorption. NU-1000 is synthetized with primary amino groups (–NH2 with affinity for CO2) by modifying the ligand prior to MOF synthesis, while post-synthetic solvent-assisted ligand incorporation is applied to insert thiol functionalities (–SH with affinity for copper) within the framework. To make the functionalized MOF catalytically active, a Cu2+ salt is impregnated into the MOF channels, which is further reduced with H2 to Cu+/Cu0 before performance assessment in CO2 conversion processes. The as-synthetized and spent catalysts were analysed regarding the structure (X-ray diffraction, infrared), bulk (mass spectrometry) and surface (X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy) composition, morphology (electronic microscopy and energy dispersive spectroscopy) and textural properties (N2 physisorption). The electrocatalytic reduction of CO2 was performed in the potential range of −0.8 to −1.8 V, indicating the formation of formic acid. Thermocatalytic experiments were carried out in an economically and energetically sustainable low-pressure (1 MPa) hydrogenation process. Methanol was obtained with 100% selectivity at temperatures up to 280 °C, and a space-time yield of ca. 100 mgMeOH gcat−1 h−1 which overcomes that of commercial CuZnO NPs designed for this purpose.
Sponsorship
University College Dublin
Other Sponsorship
Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation
Spanish National Plan of Research
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Royal Society of Chemistry
Journal
Journal of Materials Chemistry A
Volume
12
Issue
33
Start Page
21758
End Page
21771
Subjects

CO2 reduction

Metal organic framewo...

Copper

Methanol

Catalysis

DOI
10.1039/d4ta03268c
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
ISSN
2050-7488
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ie/
File(s)
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d4ta03268c.pdf

Size

2.19 MB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum (MD5)

bbfb199af4dfc8590de84c02a3a5c5ca

Owning collection
Chemistry Research Collection

Item descriptive metadata is released under a CC-0 (public domain) license: https://creativecommons.org/public-domain/cc0/.
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