Co-reporter:Nachal D. Subramanian, June Callison, C. Richard A. Catlow, Peter P. Wells, Nikolaos Dimitratos
International Journal of Hydrogen Energy 2016 Volume 41(Issue 41) pp:18441-18450
Publication Date(Web):2 November 2016
DOI:10.1016/j.ijhydene.2016.08.081
•A systematic study of glycerol APR over Pt/Al2O3 in a batch reactor is presented.•The catalytic performance is strongly influenced by reaction variables.•The reaction pathway includes dehydrogenation and dehydration steps besides reforming.Aqueous phase reforming of glycerol was studied over a series of γ-Al2O3 supported metal nanoparticle catalysts for hydrogen production in a batch reactor. Of the metals studied, Pt/Al2O3 was found to be the most active catalyst under the conditions tested. A further systematic study on the impact of reaction parameters, including stirring speed, pressure, temperature, and substrate/metal molar ratio, was conducted and the optimum conditions for hydrogen production (and kinetic regime) were determined as 240 °C, 42 bar, 1000 rpm, and substrate/metal molar ratio ≥ 4100 for a 10 wt% glycerol feed. The glycerol conversion and hydrogen yield achieved at these conditions were 18% and 17%, respectively, with negligible CO and CH4 formation. Analysis of the spent catalyst using FTIR provides an indication that the reaction pathway includes glycerol dehydrogenation and dehydration steps in the liquid phase in addition to typical reforming and water gas shift reactions in the gas phase.A systematic study of the aqueous phase reforming of glycerol over Pt/Al2O3 catalyst yielded the optimum conditions for a batch system and characterisation of the spent catalyst provided insights into possible reaction pathways.
Co-reporter:Scott M. Rogers, C. Richard A. Catlow, Carine E. Chan-Thaw, Diego Gianolio, Emma K. Gibson, Anna L. Gould, Nan Jian, Andrew J. Logsdail, Richard E. Palmer, Laura Prati, Nikolaos Dimitratos, Alberto Villa, and Peter P. Wells
ACS Catalysis 2015 Volume 5(Issue 7) pp:4377
Publication Date(Web):June 8, 2015
DOI:10.1021/acscatal.5b00754
Poly(vinyl alcohol) (PVA)-stabilized Au nanoparticles (NPs) were synthesized by colloidal methods in which temperature variations (−75 to 75 °C) and mixed H2O/EtOH solvent ratios (0, 50, and 100 vol/vol) were used. The resulting Au NPs were immobilized on TiO2 (P25), and their catalytic performance was investigated for the liquid phase oxidation of glycerol. For each unique solvent system, there was a systematic increase in the average Au particle diameter as the temperature of the colloidal preparation increased. Generation of the Au NPs in H2O at 1 °C resulted in a high observed activity compared with current Au/TiO2 catalysts (turnover frequency = 915 h–1). Interestingly, Au catalysts with similar average particle sizes but prepared under different conditions had contrasting catalytic performance. For the most active catalyst, aberration-corrected high angle annular dark field scanning transmission electron microscopy analysis identified the presence of isolated Au clusters (from 1 to 5 atoms) for the first time using a modified colloidal method, which was supported by experimental and computational CO adsorption studies. It is proposed that the variations in the populations of these species, in combination with other solvent/PVA effects, is responsible for the contrasting catalytic properties.Keywords: aberration-corrected TEM; colloids; glycerol oxidation; gold nanoparticles; heterogeneous catalysis; XAFS
Co-reporter:Dr. Carine E. Chan-Thaw;Dr. Lidia E. Chinchilla;Sebastian Campisi; Gianluigi A. Botton; Laura Prati;Dr. Nikolaos Dimitratos;Dr. Alberto Villa
ChemSusChem 2015 Volume 8( Issue 24) pp:
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/cssc.201501202
Abstract
Pt nanoparticles were prepared by a sol immobilization route, deposited on supports with different acid/base properties (MgO, activated carbon, TiO2, Al2O3, H-Mordenite), and tested in the selective oxidation of sorbose to 2-keto-gulonic acid (2-KGUA), an important precursor for vitamin C. In general, as the basicity of the support increased, a higher catalytic activity occurred. However, in most cases, a strong deactivation was observed. The best selectivity to 2-KGUA was observed with acidic supports (TiO2 and H-Mordenite) that were able to minimize the formation of C1/C2 products. We also demonstrated that, by alloying Pt to Au, it is possible to enhance significantly the selectivity of Pt-based catalysts. Moreover, the AuPt catalyst, unlike monometallic Pt, showed good stability in recycling because of the prevention of metal leaching during the reaction.