Data di Pubblicazione:
2019
Citazione:
Photoreactors design for fuels production / G. Ramis, E. Bahadori, A. Tripodi, I. Rossetti. ((Intervento presentato al 12. convegno European Congress of Chemical Engineering tenutosi a Firenze nel 2019.
Abstract:
Photoreactors design for fuels production
Gianguido Ramis1, Elnaz Bahadori1, Antonio Tripodi2, Ilenia Rossetti2
1 Dip. di Ingegneria Civile, Chimica e Ambientale, Università degli Studi di Genova and INSTM Unit Genova, Via all’Opera Pia 15A, 16100, Genova, Italy
2 Chemical Plants and Industrial Chemistry Group, Dip. Chimica, Università degli Studi di Milano, INSTM Unit Milano-Università and CNR-ISTM, via C. Golgi, 19, I-20133 Milano, Italy
*Corresponding author: gianguidoramis@unige.it
Highlights
High pressure and high temperature photocatalysis explored
Productivity boosted by unconventional reaction conditions
Tunable selectivity to different fuels from renewable or waste materials
1. Introduction
Photocatalysis can be seen as a route for the storage of solar energy by producing “solar fuels”, i.e. with artificial photosynthesis. In this work, we dealt with two challenging applications: i) the production of hydrogen through photoreforming of aqueous solutions of organic compounds and ii) the photoreduction of CO2.
Different carbohydrates (glucose, xylose and arabinose, as well as levulinic and formic acid) were used as renewable substrates for photoreforming, since they may be rather easily obtained from the hydrolysis of biomass. On the other hand, the transformation of CO2 into regenerated organic compounds, to be used as fuels or chemicals (CH4, HCOOH, HCHO, CH3OH) was also studied. Our attention was predominantly focused on the development of innovative photoreactors, operating under unconventional conditions, with the fine tuning of the operation parameters. In particular, we have set up and optimized a new photoreactor operating at pressure up to 20 bar and relatively high temperature (up to 90°C) which allowed to overcome one of the main limitations for the photoreduction of CO2 in liquid phase, i.e. the low CO2 solubility. The possibility to increase the operating pressure also allowed to explore unconventional reaction conditions, evidencing an unexpected boost of hydrogen productivity when increasing temperature in the case of the photoreforming of carbohydrates.
2. Methods
The selected photocatalysts were based on TiO2, since the main focus was reactor optimization. The materials were prepared by flame spray pyrolysis as dense nanoparticles, or in mesoporous form through a soft template synthesis, and compared with commercial samples of nanostructured TiO2 P25 by Evonik. Different metals, such as Cu and Au, Pt, Pd, Ag, Ni, with loading ranging from 0.1 to 1 mol% were added as co-catalysts (mono or bimetallic formulations). The role of the metals was that of electron sinks, to inhibit the electron-hole recombination and they were also selected due to the formation of a plasmon resonance band which improves visible light absorption. The photocatalytic activity tests have been carried out in batch mode using a high pressure photoreactor (up to 20 bar, 95°C), using a UVA immersion lamp, coaxial with the photoreactor (max = 365 nm, ca. 77 W/m2).
3. Results and discussion
As for the photoproduction of H2 we have investigated extensively the effect of pressure, temperature, carbohydrate and catalyst concentration, selecting 80°C, 4 bar, 5 g/L of carbohydrate, 0.5 g/L of catalyst and neutral pH as the best operating conditions. The highest productivity was achieved with 0.1 mol%Pt/TiO2 or 1 mol% Au6Pt2/TiO2, leading to ca. 14 mol/h kgcat of hydrogen.
As for the photoreduction of CO2, operation at high pressure allowed to boost the conversion to partially reduced compounds (HCOOH, HCHO and CH3OH), with much more limited conversion to CO and CH4. The present high pressure photoreactor also showed extremely versatile to drive the reaction towards the desired product among those listed by
Tipologia IRIS:
14 - Intervento a convegno non pubblicato
Elenco autori:
G. Ramis, E. Bahadori, A. Tripodi, I. Rossetti
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