Bismuth phosphate nanoparticle catalyst for direct oxidation of methane into formaldehyde†
Abstract
The direct oxidation of methane (CH4) to formaldehyde (HCHO) with molecular oxygen (O2) as the sole oxidant was studied over various bismuth-based catalysts (BiPO4, α-Bi2O3, β-Bi2O3) using a fixed-bed flow reactor. The catalytic activity of monoclinic BiPO4 nanoparticles (BiPO4-DEG) synthesized in a mixed solvent of diethylene glycol (DEG) and water for the direct oxidation of CH4 was the highest among the catalysts tested. In high temperature region, BiPO4-DEG was more selective for HCHO formation than FePO4 nanoparticles. Based on mechanistic studies including the catalyst effect, kinetics, pulse-reaction experiments, infrared (IR) spectroscopy, operando near ambient pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (NAP-XPS), and density functional theory (DFT) calculations, surface active oxygen species generated on BiPO4 possibly react with CH4 to give HCHO as the primary product. In contrast, the phosphate units of FePO4 nanoparticles react with CH4 followed by rapid reoxidation to FePO4.
- This article is part of the themed collection: Integrated approaches for methane activation