Top-Down Syntheses of Nickel-Based Structured Catalysts for Hydrogen Production from Ammonia.


Journal article


Yu-jin Lee, Junyoung Cha, Yeonsu Kwak, Yongha Park, Y. Jo, Hyangsoo Jeong, Hyuntae Sohn, Chang Won Yoon, Yongmin Kim, Kwang-bum Kim, S. Nam
ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces, 2020

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APA   Click to copy
Lee, Y.-jin, Cha, J., Kwak, Y., Park, Y., Jo, Y., Jeong, H., … Nam, S. (2020). Top-Down Syntheses of Nickel-Based Structured Catalysts for Hydrogen Production from Ammonia. ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Lee, Yu-jin, Junyoung Cha, Yeonsu Kwak, Yongha Park, Y. Jo, Hyangsoo Jeong, Hyuntae Sohn, et al. “Top-Down Syntheses of Nickel-Based Structured Catalysts for Hydrogen Production from Ammonia.” ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces (2020).


MLA   Click to copy
Lee, Yu-jin, et al. “Top-Down Syntheses of Nickel-Based Structured Catalysts for Hydrogen Production from Ammonia.” ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces, 2020.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{yu-jin2020a,
  title = {Top-Down Syntheses of Nickel-Based Structured Catalysts for Hydrogen Production from Ammonia.},
  year = {2020},
  journal = {ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces},
  author = {Lee, Yu-jin and Cha, Junyoung and Kwak, Yeonsu and Park, Yongha and Jo, Y. and Jeong, Hyangsoo and Sohn, Hyuntae and Yoon, Chang Won and Kim, Yongmin and Kim, Kwang-bum and Nam, S.}
}

Abstract

We report the fabrication and catalytic performance evaluation of highly active and stable nickel (Ni)-based structured catalysts for ammonia dehydrogenation with nearly complete conversion using nonprecious metal catalysts. Low-temperature chemical alloying (LTCA) followed by selective aluminum (Al) dealloying was utilized to synthesize foam-type structured catalysts ready for implementation in commercial-scale catalytic reactors. The crystalline phases of Ni-Al alloy (NiAl3, Ni2Al3, or both) in the near-surface layer were controlled by tuning the alloying time. The best-performing catalyst was obtained from a Ni foam substrate with a NiAl3/Ni2Al3 overlayer synthesized by LTCA at 400 °C for 20 h. The developed Ni catalyst exhibited an activity enhancement of 10-fold over the nontreated Ni foam and showed outstanding activities of 15 800 molH2molNi-1h-1 (TOF: 4.39 s-1) and 19 978 molH2molNi-1h-1 (TOF: 5.55 s-1) at 550 and 600 °C, respectively. This performance is unprecedented compared with previously reported Ni-based ammonia cracking catalysts with higher-end performance (TOFs of 0.08-1.45 s-1 at 550 °C). Moreover, this catalyst showed excellent stability for 100 h at 600 °C while discharging an extremely low NH3 concentration of 1034 ppm. The NH3 concentration in the exhaust gas was further reduced to 690 and 271 ppm at 700 and 800 °C, respectively, while no deactivation was observed at these elevated temperatures. Through material characterizations, we clarified that controlling the degree of Al alloying in the outermost layer of Ni is a crucial factor in determining the activity and stability because residual Al possibly modifies the electronic structure of Ni for enhanced activity as well as transforming to acidic alumina for increased intrinsic activity and stability.


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