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<div class="csl-entry">Polsomboon, N., Numpilai, T., Jitapunkul, K., Faungnawakij, K., Chareonpanich, M., An, X., He, L., Rupprechter, G., & Witoon, T. (2025). CO₂ hydrogenation to light olefins over Fe–Co/K–Al₂O₃ catalysts prepared via microwave calcination. <i>REACTION CHEMISTRY & ENGINEERING</i>. https://doi.org/10.1039/D4RE00428K</div>
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dc.identifier.issn
2058-9883
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dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12708/209109
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dc.description.abstract
This study evaluates the effects of microwave calcination on Fe-Co/K-Al₂O₃ catalysts for CO₂ hydrogenation to light olefins, comparing microwave-treated samples at various power settings (700 W, 616 W, 511 W and 364 W) with a traditionally calcined counterpart. The lowest power setting results in incomplete precursor decomposition, adversely affecting Fe, K, and Al₂O₃ interactions. At medium power, though decomposition improves, Fe₂O₃ aggregates due to poor dispersion. Medium-high power produces rod-shaped structures with enhanced Fe and K contact, while the highest setting increases Fe₂O₃ particle size and Fe-K species content to 35.4%, still below the 37.9% observed in the traditional catalyst. Significantly, the formation of Fe-C species (Fe₅C₂) correlates positively with Fe-K interactions, enhancing the olefins to paraffins ratio. Additionally, the role of Fe₃O₄ is vital, providing the highest light olefins yield (24.5%) at an optimal Fe-C/Fe₃O₄ ratio of 0.34 in the medium-high power sample. Compared to the traditional catalyst, which declines significantly in CO₂ conversion and olefin yield due to carbonaceous deposits over time, the medium-high power catalyst shows stable performance and reduced coke formation. Moreover, microwave calcination slashes energy consumption by over 99%, underscoring its potential for more sustainable and efficient catalyst preparation.
en
dc.language.iso
en
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dc.publisher
ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
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dc.relation.ispartof
REACTION CHEMISTRY & ENGINEERING
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dc.subject
Surface Science
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dc.subject
microwave calcination
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dc.subject
catalysts
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dc.subject
carbon
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dc.title
CO₂ hydrogenation to light olefins over Fe–Co/K–Al₂O₃ catalysts prepared via microwave calcination