Carbon recycling through catalysis: direct CO2-to-CH4 conversion for sustainable fuels
Abstract
Among the distinct value-added products of the catalyst-mediated CO2 reduction reaction (CO2RR), CH4 stands out as a superior energy carrier on account of its high combustion heat. However, designing a highly active and selective catalytic system presents an ongoing challenge to circumvent C–C coupling that results in multi-carbon products during CO2 methanation. Consequently, substantial strategic initiatives, including structural modulation, catalyst composition tuning, surface modification employing single-site catalysts, defect engineering, use of co-catalysts, elemental doping, and optimisation of operating conditions, have been pursued to enhance the catalytic activity for proficient CO2 methanation. This review systematically studies the evolving ideas and strategic advances in thermocatalysis, electrocatalysis, and photocatalysis, alongside coupled catalytic systems including photothermal, electrothermal, and photo-electrocatalytic approaches for CO2 hydrogenation to CH4, emphasizing their evolution from foundational progresses to state-of-the-art executions driven by renewable energy inputs. Furthermore, this review highlights the catalytic mechanisms, kinetics, and roles of the active components, supports, and promoters in CO2 methanation. In addition, the feasibility and economic potential of compressed natural gas (CNG) production through CO2 methanation are critically examined, emphasizing its cost-effectiveness and scalability for large-scale implementation. Finally, this review provides a comprehensive roadmap for advancing catalyst design and optimizing processes to enable economically sustainable CNG production.
- This article is part of the themed collection: Journal of Materials Chemistry A Recent Review Articles

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