High-yield production of aromatics over CuFeO2/hierarchical HZSM-5 via CO2 Fischer–Tropsch synthesis†
Abstract
The direct conversion of CO2 to aromatics with the aid of renewable hydrogen sources is a promising way to mitigate the CO2 emissions and simultaneously replace the dwindling fossil resources for the production of valuable chemicals. Even though some excellent results have been obtained for the direct conversion of CO2 to aromatics via the methanol-mediated or modified Fischer–Tropsch synthesis (FTS) pathway, the low space–time yield (STY) of aromatics and the high selectivity of C1 by-products (CO and CH4) are the main bottlenecks. Herein, we demonstrate that the bifunctional catalyst (CuFeO2/hierarchical HZSM-5) composed of defafossite-CuFeO2 exhibits outstanding catalytic performance for producing olefins from CO2 hydrogenation, and hierarchical HZSM-5 can catalyze the direct CO2 conversion to aromatics with a high efficiency by single pass. Under the optimized reaction conditions, the CuFeO2/hierarchical HZSM-5 bifunctional catalyst can suppress the total selectivity of CO and CH4 to less than 12% with a high aromatics STY of 431.8 mgCH2 gcat−1 h−1 at a CO2 conversion of 52.8% and outperforms previously reported catalysts. In addition, upon the selective elimination of external surface acidity via epitaxial growth of a Silicalite-1 shell on the hierarchical HZSM-5 surface, the fraction of p-xylene in xylenes is improved from 27.8% to 66.9%. Furthermore, H recycling is realized via the intimate synergy between CuFeO2 and hierarchical HZSM-5 and demonstrated to be significantly vital for improving the aromatics formation. The CO2 adsorbed on CuFeO2 also acts as an acceptor for H species produced from the olefin dehydrogenative aromatization in hierarchical HZSM-5, which in turn increases the aromatics STY by shifting the chemical thermodynamic equilibrium.