(246h) Mechanistic Study of Direct Coupling of CO2 and C2H4 over Atomically Dispersed Metal at Graphene Edges | AIChE

(246h) Mechanistic Study of Direct Coupling of CO2 and C2H4 over Atomically Dispersed Metal at Graphene Edges

Authors 

Nguyen, Q. - Presenter, University of Oklahoma
Wang, B., The University of Oklahoma
Direct coupling of CO2 and ethylene (hereinafter DCCE) to acrylic acid is valuable for valorizing CO2 to manufacture acrylate-derived products. However, previous studies in DCCE have been limited on molecular catalysts with challenges in improving catalytic performance. In this work, we employed density functional theory calculations and ab initio molecular dynamics simulations to investigate the heterogeneous catalysis of DCCE over atomically dispersed metal centers at nitrogen-doped zigzag edge of graphene. Based on competitive adsorption and structural stability, Mo, Cr, V, Ru, and Ni active sites are chosen to explore the reaction kinetics. We find that the activation barriers are determined by the charge redistribution at transition states, which explains the trend of activity for the C-C coupling and the hydrogen transfer, two key steps in DCCE. Furthermore, we show that the intramolecular hydrogen transfer (rate-limiting step) is hindered due to the lack of local coordinate at the active sites. We thus propose to use co-adsorbed water as a “proton-exchanger” following a water-assisted route, and show that the activation barriers are reduced over all metal centers. Particularly, water promotes the hydrogen transfer over metals with strong CO2-ethylene co-activation and facile C-C coupling kinetics, which could be considered promising for DCCE. In both mechanisms, the stability of metallactone intermediate can be used to predict the catalytic activity. It is anticipated that the insights from this work can provide guidelines for mimicking well-defined multifunctional active sites in molecular catalysts to design heterogeneous catalysts for such C-C coupling, which advances catalytic utilization of CO2.