Carbon Capture Science & Technology (Mar 2025)
Oxidative dehydrogenation of ethane to ethylene with CO2 via Mg-Al spinel catalysts: Insight into dehydrogenation mechanism
Abstract
This study compares the CO2-assisted oxidative dehydrogenation of ethane (CO2-ODHE) performance of Mg-Al spinel catalysts doped with various metals (Cr, Fe, Co, Ga) that possess dehydrogenation activity. Both experimental and theoretical analyses were conducted to explore the reaction mechanism of CO2-ODHE on the spinel catalyst. The findings indicate that the MgFeAlO4 spinel catalyst exhibited CO2-ODHE activity at 600 °C, achieving a CO2 conversion rate of 20.3 %, an ethane conversion rate of 27.9 %, and an ethylene selectivity of 87.9 %. Mechanistic studies revealed that CO2 activation primarily occurs through the reverse water-gas shift reaction, and density functional theory calculations identified the doped metal ions as the principal active sites for ethane activation. These results suggest that CO2-ODHE on the spinel surface follows a mechanism of catalytic dehydrogenation coupled with the reverse water-gas shift reaction. Additionally, the effects of Fe doping contents and reaction temperature were investigated. When the ratio of Fe3+ to Al3+ was 1, corresponding to the MgFeAlO4 spinel catalyst, the CO2-ODHE performance was optimal, yielding 23.3 % ethylene. Increasing the reaction temperature enhanced ethane conversion but reduced ethylene selectivity, with both ethane conversion and ethylene selectivity reaching approximately 49 % at 700 °C.