Mapping Temperature Heterogeneities during Catalytic CO2 Methanation with Operando Luminescence Thermometry

Publication date

2023-10-24

Authors

Jacobs, Thimo SanderISNI 0000000523805466
van Swieten, Thomas PISNI 0000000492798266
Vonk, Sander J WISNI 0000000492798311
Bosman, Isa P
Melcherts, AngelaISNI 0000000524208786
Janssen, Bas C
Janssens, Joris C.L.ISNI 0000000506769467
Monai, MatteoORCID 0000-0001-6945-4391ISNI 0000000492914765
Meijerink, AndriesISNI 000000039216731X
Rabouw, F. T.ISNI 0000000492491619

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Abstract

Controlling and understanding reaction temperature variations in catalytic processes are crucial for assessing the performance of a catalyst material. Local temperature measurements are challenging, however. Luminescence thermometry is a promising remote-sensing tool, but it is cross-sensitive to the optical properties of a sample and other external parameters. In this work, we measure spatial variations in the local temperature on the micrometer length scale during carbon dioxide (CO 2) methanation over a TiO 2-supported Ni catalyst and link them to variations in catalytic performance. We extract local temperatures from the temperature-dependent emission of Y 2O 3:Nd 3+ particles, which are mixed with the CO 2 methanation catalyst. Scanning, where a near-infrared laser locally excites the emitting Nd 3+ ions, produces a temperature map with a micrometer pixel size. We first designed the Y 2O 3:Nd 3+ particles for optimal temperature precision and characterized cross-sensitivity of the measured signal to parameters other than temperature, such as light absorption by the blackened sample due to coke deposition at elevated temperatures. Introducing reaction gases causes a local temperature increase of the catalyst of on average 6-25 K, increasing with the reactor set temperature in the range of 550-640 K. Pixel-to-pixel variations in the temperature increase show a standard deviation of up to 1.5 K, which are attributed to local variations in the catalytic reaction rate. Mapping and understanding such temperature variations are crucial for the optimization of overall catalyst performance on the nano- and macroscopic scale.

Keywords

CO methanation, heterogeneous catalysis, lanthanides, luminescence thermometry, temperature uncertainty, General Engineering, General Physics and Astronomy, General Materials Science, SDG 13 - Climate Action

Citation

Jacobs, T S, van Swieten, T P, Vonk, S J W, Bosman, I P, Melcherts, A E M, Janssen, B C, Janssens, J C L, Monai, M, Meijerink, A, Rabouw, F T, van der Stam, W & Weckhuysen, B M 2023, 'Mapping Temperature Heterogeneities during Catalytic CO2 Methanation with Operando Luminescence Thermometry', ACS Nano, vol. 17, no. 20, pp. 20053-20061. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.3c05622