Hydrogen generation from simulated biomass pyrolysis tail gas on Ni–CeO2–Al2O3 catalysts
Abstract
The pyrolysis of biomass inevitably produces gaseous products, known as tail gases, which should be considered as a renewable resource to increase the value of the pyrolysis process. The conversion of simulated cotton stalk pyrolysis gases into hydrogen was studied on a series of Ni–Ce–Al catalysts with various Ce/Al ratios synthesized via one-pot urea hydrolysis. The catalysts were evaluated in a fixed-bed reactor at 600 °C. The correlation between catalytic activity and physicochemical properties was analyzed using ICP-OES, BET, XRD, H2-TPR, CO2-TPD, XPS, TEM, and TGA. Among the catalysts tested, Ni–0.4Ce–Al exhibited excellent activity and stability, where the CH4 conversion rate, CO conversion rate, and H2 production rate reached 84.5%, 79.1%, and 82.1%, respectively. This enhanced performance was attributed to the improved reducibility, more weak basic sites, and high dispersion of active species. In addition, the strong interaction between Ni and CeO2 effectively prevents metal sintering and provides oxygen vacancies through the Ce4+–Ce3+ pathway to enhance the anti-carbon deposition ability, thereby improving the overall stability of the catalyst.
- This article is part of the themed collection: Sustainable Energy & Fuels Recent HOT Articles

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