An inverse ceria–copper catalyst for effective methanol steam reforming
Abstract
Methanol is a promising hydrogen carrier for fuel cell vehicles (FCVs) via the methanol steam reforming (MSR) reaction. Ceria-supported copper catalysts have garnered significant attention due to their remarkable oxygen storage capacity and abundant oxygen vacancies. Herein, we developed a colloidal solution combustion (CSC) method to synthesize an inverse catalyst. Compared with supported catalysts, the inverse Cu0.9Ce0.1Ox catalyst exhibits a larger copper surface area and abundant copper–ceria interfacial sites, contributing to an outstanding H2 formation rate of 1.28 mol gcat−1 h−1 at 250 °C. The linear correlation between turnover frequency values and interfacial OV–Ce3+ length indicates the crucial role of the Cu+–OV–Ce3+ sites. Kinetic studies reveal significantly lower apparent activation energy and reduced reaction orders of reactants on the inverse Cu0.9Ce0.1Ox catalyst. Furthermore, mechanistic studies demonstrate the diversity of rate-determining steps on inverse and supported catalysts. Both the dehydrogenation of CH3O* and the reaction between formate species and hydroxy groups are kinetically facilitated on the supported Cu0.1Ce0.9Ox catalyst. This work introduces a solution combustion method to synthesize a highly active inverse copper–ceria catalyst, which can also be extended to other heterogeneous catalytic systems towards rational design of high-performance catalysts.