Hydrogen production by steam reforming of methanol by Cu–Zn/CeAlO3 perovskite†
Abstract
In steam reforming of methanol (SRM), the efficacy of CeAlO3 perovskite as a support for a bimetal catalyst was investigated. CeAlO3 perovskite was synthesized employing a mesoporous silica (MCF) hard template and an incipient wetness impregnation approach to load copper and zinc over the surface of the porous CeAlO3 perovskite. Different loadings of Cu–Zn on CeAlO3 were used and studied for their activity and selectivity. Initial studies were done with 5%Cu–5%Zn/CeAlO3 and thereafter a superior catalyst 10%Cu–10%Zn/CeAlO3 was synthesised and employed for SRM. 10%Cu–10%Zn/CeAlO3 catalyst showed very high activity, and selectivity, with minimal carbon deposition. It led to a high conversion of methanol (98.9%) to produce 97.9 mol% hydrogen at a significantly lower temperature of 593 K, using steam to carbon (S/C) of 6, and GHSV of 2700 mL g−1 h−1, in comparison with the published literature. In addition, contaminants such as CO linked to oxygen vacancy defects and acid sites on the CeAlO3 surface were not discovered in the Cu–Zn/CeAlO3 catalyst. The catalyst was characterised using XRD, FESEM-EDS, HR-TEM, H2-TPR, CO2 and NH3 TPD, BET, and XPS. The activity and selectivity of the Cu–Zn/CeAlO3 catalyst in SRM were studied and it appears to have industrial applications.