Basam A. E.
Ben-Arfa
a,
Stéphane
Abanades
b,
Isabel M. Miranda
Salvado
a,
José M. F.
Ferreira
a and
Robert C.
Pullar
*ac
aDepartment of Materials and Ceramic Engineering/CICECO – Aveiro Institute of Materials, University of Aveiro, 3810-193 Aveiro, Portugal. E-mail: robertcarlyle.pullar@unive.it
bProcesses, Materials, and Solar Energy Laboratory (PROMES-CNRS), 7 Rue du Four Solaire, 66120 Font-Romeu, France
cDepartment of Molecular Sciences and Nanosystems (DSMN), Ca’ Foscari University of Venice, Scientific Campus, Via Torino 155, 30172 Venezia Mestre, VE, Italy
First published on 7th March 2022
We report the first ever robocast (additive manufacturing/3D printing) sintered ceria scaffolds, and explore their use for the production of renewable fuels via solar thermochemical fuel production (STFP, water and carbon dioxide splitting using concentrated solar energy). CeO2 catalyst scaffolds were fabricated as 50 mm diameter discs (struts and voids ∼500 μm), sintered at 1450 °C, with specific surface area of 1.58 m2 g−1. These scaffolds have hierarchical porosity, consisting of the macroporous scaffold structure combined with nanoscale porosity within the ceria struts, with mesopores <75 Å and an average pore size of ∼4 nm, and microporosity <2 nm with a microporous surface area of 0.29 m2 g−1. The ceria grains were ≤500 nm in diameter after sintering. STFP testing was carried out via thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) with reduction between 1050–1400 °C under argon, and oxidation at 1050 °C with 50% CO2, gave rapid CO production during oxidation, with high peak CO production rates (0.436 μmol g−1 s−1, 0.586 ml g−1 min−1), for total CO yield of 78 μmol g−1 (1.747 ml g−1). 90% CO was obtained after just 10 min of oxidation, comparing well to reticulated ceria foams, this CO production rate being an order of magnitude greater than that for ceria powders when tested at similar temperatures.
Solar thermochemical fuel production (STFP) is one of the potential solutions to our current environmental and energy crisis. It enables the production of renewable fuels by utilising concentrated solar power (CSP, sunlight focused with parabolic mirrors to heat up to 2000 °C) to drive a redox reaction on a metal oxide catalyst, such as ceria.8 This oxide is reduced in a neutral atmosphere at high temperatures (1400–1500 °C) to CeO2−δ, and then cooled to around 1000 °C as either water vapour or carbon dioxide are introduced. This takes oxygen from the H2O or CO2 to re-oxidise the ceria, splitting these molecules to produce H2 or CO.9 H2 is a potential fuel in its own right, and CO can be used to produce other renewable synthetic fuels. This fuel production cycle is powered by solar energy, and can be used to mitigate CO2 emissions if the CO2 feed is taken directly from such a source. Ceria was first investigated as a material specifically for solar thermochemical water splitting in 2006 by Abanades and Flamant,10 and for the solar thermochemical splitting of CO2 in 2010 by Chueh et al.11 and Haussener and Steinfeld.12,13
Since then, many studies have investigated ceria redox materials, but as we demonstrated in a recent review paper, the morphology of the ceria can have a great effect on its thermochemical fuel production efficiency.14 Repeating 3-DOM porous structures such as reticulated foams15 or cork derived ecoceramics16–18 of ceria proved to be excellent materials because of their structure, rather than any intrinsic chemical or ionic enhancements or dopants. This led us to speculate that 3D printed or robocast ceria, with a regular but open network structure, similar to robocast bone scaffolds developed for biomedicine,19 could be a potentially superior form for such STFP applications.
There has been very little previous work on the 3D printing or robocasting of ceria. For the additive manufacturing of ceramics, alumina was 3D printed by freeze-form extrusion fabrication in 2007,20 and inkjet printing of 80 μm layers in 2008,21 followed by lithography-based ceramic manufacturing in 201422 and 3D powder bed printing in 2015.23 Alumina extruded with a polymer binder was tested for syngas reforming when coated with NiO or CeO2 in 2017,24 colloidal alumina gels and a hydrogel were robocast in 2012–201325,26 and 2016,27 respectively, and robocast alumina pastes were reported in 2017–2018.28,29 Solid 20 mol% Sm-doped ceria pellets were produced by 3D direct writing from a paraffin based slurry for solid oxide fuel cell applications (and then sintered at only 700 °C) in 2019,30 a 10 mol% ceria-stabilised-zirconia and alumina composite biomaterial was robocast from a hydrogel in 2017,31 and the 3D printing by stereo lithography of Al2O3 with 12 mol% CeO2–ZrO2 (Zr4+:Ce4+ = molar ratio of 88:12) was reported in 2020.32 The only reports of similar porous ceria structures are those made by the replication method on extruded polymer supports for CSP applications in 2019,33 and 3D printed polymer scaffolds in 2021,34 ceria coated on 3D printed polymer supports/structures/scaffolds,35,36 CuO/CeO2 catalysts coated on 3D printed polymer scaffolds,37 Ni/CeO2–ZrO2 powder deposited on 3D printed stainless-steel honeycomb monoliths,38 CeO2–ZrO2–La2O3 nanopowder catalysts supported on robocast graphene oxide scaffolds,39 3D printed ceria/silica microsphere/boehmite (γ-AlO(OH)) particle-stabilised foams by moulding and direct ink writing,40 and robocast ceria coated with a nickel catalyst.41 All such 3D printed ceramics need to be sintered after manufacture to produce the ceria ceramic, particularly if destined for high temperature use – in nearly all of the cases above, the ceria was used unsintered as a catalyst. Ref. 33 does not state at what temperature the materials were heated/sintered after coating the polymer templates, just that they were thermochemically cycled in tests at 1450 °C, the polymer scaffold templated ceria in ref. 34 was sintered at 1400 °C, and the ceria-based foams in40 were sintered at 1500 °C. The robocast ceria in ref. 41 was intended as a support for the 10 wt% nickel catalyst, and so was not sintered, but just calcined at 450–500 °C to maintain a porous nature. The catalytic decomposition of ammonia was carried out at a maximum of 600 °C with this material.
In this paper we report the ever first synthesis and characterisation of sintered robocast pure ceria, and its use in STFP to split water and carbon dioxide. This 3D printed sintered ceria would also be suitable for other high temperature applications. The macroporous robocast ceria structures were in the form of “woodpile” type cylinders and discs around 50 mm in diameter after sintering, with 500 μm diameter struts and 500 μm sized voids, produced from a ceria powder printing paste/ink with 46% solids loading. They were sintered at 1450 °C, their crystal structure, microstructure, sintering behaviour and porosity characterised, and their redox properties at high temperatures investigated for potential use in renewable solar energy applications.
Fig. 1 Particle size distribution for the ceria powder. The data points show the particle size distribution, and the dotted lines indicate the probable bimodal nature of this powder. |
After completion of powder addition, and ensuring a homogeneous suspension, 2% HPMC was added as a thickening agent to provide flowability, and to add shear thinning behaviour to the paste at applied shear, followed by centrifugal mixing for 6 minutes. 0.02% PEI was added as a coagulant, to help preserve the shape after extrusion/robocasting, and the paste was then mixed for a further 10 minutes.
X-ray diffraction (XRD) patterns were measured on a PANalytical X'PERT PRO 3 instrument (Cu Kα radiation, 10–80°, 0.01° 2θ step-scan and 200 s per step) with phase identification by HighScore Plus software. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) images were taken with a Hitachi S-4100 microscope, on samples coated with carbon. The specific surface area (SSA) & porosity were measured by the Brunauer–Emmett–Teller (BET) method on a Micrometrics Gemini VII Surface Area Analyzer (Micrometrics Instruments Corp., Norcross, GA, USA). Adsorption/desorption isotherms were measured using N2 as the adsorbate at 77 K, and outgassing the samples at 120 °C. The geometrical density of the scaffolds was measured from their dimensions and mass. The bulk density of ceria is 7.22 g cm−3.
The thermochemical redox capability of the sintered ceria scaffold catalyst was investigated by thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) performed in controlled atmospheres on a Setaram Setsys Evo 1750. The sample was placed in a platinum crucible hung inside the furnace chamber, the chamber evacuated to eliminate residual air, and filled with argon gas flowing at 20 mL min−1 (99.999% purity). Heating and cooling rates of 20 °C min−1 were used throughout. The reduction step was carried out at 1400 °C per 45 min under Ar, and then the temperature was lowered to 1050 °C in Ar and held for 60 min for the re-oxidation step at isothermal conditions. For this a CO2 stream was injected from the auxiliary gas inlet and mixed with the Ar carrier gas (50% CO2 in Ar) at a total flow rate of 20 mL min−1. The mixture entered at the top of the furnace chamber towards the sample and then exited the chamber at the bottom.
The mass losses during thermal reduction are converted to the mole amount of O2 released per gram of ceria according to:
nO2 = Δmloss/(MO2·mceria) | (1) |
The mass gain associated with CO2 splitting results in a CO amount (mol g−1) which can be calculated as:
nCO = Δmgain/(MO·mceria) | (2) |
Fig. 2 Photographs of the sintered robocast ceria scaffolds (a–b), and their shrinkage in the vertical and longitudinal directions with heating (c). |
The geometrical density of the green ceria scaffolds before sintering was 1.08 g cm−3, 15.0% of that of bulk ceria. The geometrical density of the ceria scaffolds after sintering at 1450 °C was 1.85 g cm−3, or 25.6% of that of bulk ceria, giving an increase in volume density of 71.3%. This indicated that as well as the shrinkage of the volume of the scaffolds, the ceria struts themselves had become significantly more dense, with probable loss of some meso- and microporosity. The density of the sintered ceria scaffolds indicated a scaffold macroporosity of around 75%.
As expected, XRD showed that the sintered scaffolds consisted of highly crystalline CeO2 with the cubic fluorite structure (Fig. 3a), matching JCPDS file 34-0394. SEM images show that the diameter of the struts had shrunk to ∼450 μm, with a noticeable narrowing to smaller diameters between the intersections where the struts cross (Fig. 3b). It was probably this increased densification between the intersections which led to the greater scaffold density than just linear shrinkage would allow for, and suggested that the struts will be more meso-/microporous near the intersections. This resulted in the formation of rhombohedral shaped voids in some cases, with dimensions up to 750 × 750 μm (Fig. 3a), larger than the intended 500 μm. The scaffold in Fig. 3 was polished on the surface, but the shrinkage does appear to be greater in the struts in lower layers. The internal microstructure can be seen in Fig. 3c, and it consists of poorly sintered submicron grains <0.5 μm in diameter, with an observable intergranular porosity. The surface of the struts was also poorly sintered (Fig. 3d), and appeared to be even more porous than the interior, although the grains were slightly larger on the exterior, up to 1 μm in diameter (Fig. 3e). The fact the surface and interior of the ceria scaffolds seems to be to some extent porous even when sintered at 1450 °C is a very promising feature for STFP applications, as it will allow the CO2 or H2O vapour to permeate into the scaffold material (inside the struts featuring submicron grains forming an interconnected macroporous network), and O2 to escape, during the solar-powered redox reactions.
The BET adsorption/desorption isotherm is shown in Fig. 4a, and is a type IV isotherm, indicating initial monolayer coverage, followed by multilayer coverage with the hysteresis loop suggesting that capillary condensation is taking place in mesopores (20–500 Å). The shape of the isotherm is H4, indicating particles with broad size distribution and with internal irregularly-shaped voids between them, and it is typically due to the filling of micropores and/or mesopores. The BET SSA was 1.58 m2 g−1, and the T-plot indicated that 1.29 m2 g−1 was external porosity and 0.29 m2 g−1 was due to internal microporosity (<20 Å). The BJH (Barrett, Joyner and Halenda) analysis of desorption and adsorption only accounts for meso- and macroporosity (>20 Å), and this gives an adsorption SSA of 1.14 m2 g−1 and a desorption SSA of 1.01 m2 g−1. The cumulative BJH pore area and pore volume plots are shown in Fig. 4b and c, along with details of the pore width intervals and average pore width value for each point. The overall average BJH pore size was 39.5 Å and 42.9 Å for adsorption and desorption, respectively, with most of the SSA coming from pores being in the 20–75 Å range (Fig. 4b). Larger pores contribute relatively much greater volume, so the pore volume distribution showed significant contribution from pores with width up to 250 Å, with average pore volumes of 0.001127 cm3 g−1 and 0.001079 cm3 g−1 from adsorption and desorption, respectively (Fig. 4c). Once again, this observed micro- and mesoporosity still existing in a material sintered at 1450 °C should be helpful to the STFP capabilities of the ceria scaffolds.
273.2 mg sample | 1st cycle | 2nd cycle |
---|---|---|
Weight loss (mg) | 0.302 | 0.375 |
Weight loss (%) | 0.111 | 0.138 |
Weight gain (mg) | 0.273 | 0.342 |
Weight gain (%) | 0.100 | 0.126 |
O2 production (μmol g−1) | 35 | 43 |
O2 production (ml g−1) | 0.784 | 0.963 |
Peak O2 production (μmol g−1 s−1) | 0.0555 | 0.0574 |
Peak O2 production (ml g−1 min−1) | 0.0746 | 0.0771 |
Peak O2 production (mg min−1) | 0.029 | 0.030 |
CO production (μmol g−1) | 63 | 78 |
CO production (ml g−1) | 1.411 | 1.747 |
Peak CO production (μmol g−1 s−1) | 0.2525 | 0.4361 |
Peak CO production (ml g−1 min−1) | 0.3394 | 0.5861 |
Peak CO production (mg min−1) | 0.066 | 0.114 |
Peak O2 production temp (°C) | 1391 | 1394 |
δ | 0.012 | 0.015 |
If the reduction/oxidation process is fully efficient the weight loss and weight gain should be equal, and the quantity of CO produced should be double that of the O2 released. In this case, we can see that in both cycles the oxidation was slightly incomplete (90.1% and 91.2%), and the ratio of CO:O2 was 1.80 and 1.81. The oxidation step was completed well before the end of the 60 min dwell, suggesting that it is the material morphology rather than any thermodynamic/kinetic factor that is limiting the 100% re-oxidation of the ceria.
It is also clear that the oxidation step is much more rapid than the reduction step for both cycles, and the derivative of mass change (dw/dt) is shown for the second cycle in Fig. 5b. In both cycles the reduction began as soon as the temperature increase began >1050 °C, and the peak of O2 production was actually achieved before the 1400 °C isothermal step was reached, at 1391 °C and 1394 °C in the first and second cycles. In the second, stabilised cycle, weight loss continued throughout the 45 min 1400 °C isothermal period, albeit at a lowered rate. The peak rates of O2 production were very similar, at 0.0555 μmol g−1 s−1 (0.029 mg min−1) and 0.0574 μmol g−1 s−1 (0.030 mg min−1), for the first and second cycles. 90% of the total weight loss was achieved after 41.75 min of the reduction step (Fig. 5b). On the other hand, the oxidation step is instantaneous and very rapid as soon as the CO2 is injected at 1050 °C, with a sudden peak in dw/dt. The peak CO production rates were 0.2525 μmol g−1 s−1 (0.066 mg min−1) and 0.4361 μmol g−1 s−1 (0.114 mg min−1) for the first and second cycles, more than 4.5 and 7.6 times greater than the peak O2 rates for those cycles, respectively. In the second cycle CO production is effectively over after 30 min of the oxidation step, and a 90% weight gain was achieved after only 10.10 min (Fig. 5b). This means that the oxidation step could be greatly reduced in duration, with savings in both energy and time.
Although there have been no reports on the use of sintered robocast ceria scaffolds before this, these data can be compared to other ceria STFP materials tested for CO2 splitting.14 The reduction/oxidation temperatures used are crucial, so comparison should only be made to results at similar redox temperatures of 1400 °C and ∼1000 °C. The total CO yields of 1.411 ml g−1 and 1.747 ml g−1 are lower than those reported for ceria powders (2.28 ml g−1)42 and cork derived (3.36 ml g−1)16 and pine-derived (2.1 ml g−1)43 3-DOM ecoceramics, and are comparable to those for reticulated ceria foams made by the replication method (1.68 ml g−1).16 However, the peak CO production rate in the second stabilised cycle of 0.5861 ml g−1 min−1 is an order of magnitude greater than that reported for the ceria powder (0.067 ml g−1 min−1),42 demonstrating the utility of these ordered scaffold structures. These values also compare well to the recently published results for ceria scaffolds made from coating sacrificial 3D printed polymer scaffolds with a ceria paste, which was then sintered at 1400 °C, when tested by TGA.34 Under identical reduction and oxidation conditions, these polymer-derived scaffolds produced slightly higher peak CO production rates of 0.64 and 0.72 ml g−1 min−1 in their first and second cycles, and CO yields of 93 and 100 μmol g−1. This was despite them having a much lower density of only 0.27 g cm−3 and significantly greater estimated macroporosity of 98%, compared to the values of 1.85 g cm−3 and scaffold porosity of 75% for the pure ceria robocast structures reported here, and suggest that the capability of these robocast ceria scaffolds could be significantly increased with further refinements of the scaffold structure to increase macroporosity. The peak fuel production rates are still significantly lower than those of the biomimetic ecoceramics or reticulated foams mentioned above, but again these results could be improved upon by either varying the dimensions of the struts and voids, or by incurring a level of hierarchical porosity within the struts of the ceria scaffold itself.
The relatively low δ values of 0.012–0.015 indicated that the ceria scaffold was not greatly reduced, for example being slightly lower compared to the ceria powder or cork ecoceramic.16,42 The reduction temperature of 1400 °C was chosen because it will be the nominal operation temperature of the solar reactor during actual STFP tests of these ceria scaffolds in the future. Although a higher reduction yield could be obtained at a higher temperature, the main issues would be linked to the reactant losses by sublimation and to constraints of thermal stability for the materials of the solar reactor and the reactive material itself. Furthermore, heat losses (especially radiative) are dramatically increased when increasing the reactor temperature, which in turn downgrades the solar-to-fuel energy conversion efficiency. For these reasons, measurements were not made at higher reduction temperatures.
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