Electrochemical oxidative dehydrogenation of propane to propylene in an oxygen-ion conducting solid oxide electrolyzer†
Abstract
Oxidative dehydrogenation of propane to propylene is a feasible and promising route to meet the requirement for propylene production. This paper reports a new method of electrochemical dehydrogenation of propane at the anode while reducing carbon dioxide in a solid oxide cell at 700 °C using perovskite (La0.3Sr0.7)1−x(Ti0.85Mn0.15)1−xNixO3+δ as the electrode material. Manganese doping is utilized to regulate the concentration of oxygen vacancies and in situ precipitation of nickel nanoparticles to establish metal-oxide interfacial active sites. This improves propane electrolytic properties and the catalyst's anti-coking properties through oxygen ion conduction. With symmetric cells, using (La0.3Sr0.7)1−x(Ti0.85Mn0.15)1−xNixO3+δ as electrodes can achieve propane conversions of up to 37.07% and a propylene yield of 13.92%.