Abstract
Perovskite oxides have recently been proposed as promising redox intermediates for solar thermochemical splitting of H2O and CO2, offering the benefit of significantly reduced operating temperatures. We present a systematic experimental screening of doped lanthanum manganites within the composition space La1-x(Ca,Sr)xMn1-yAlyO3 and identify several promising redox materials. In particular, La0.6Sr0.4Mn0.6Al0.4O3 and La0.6Ca0.4Mn0.6Al0.4O3 boast a five- to thirteen-fold improvement in the reduction extent compared to the state-of-the-art material CeO2 in the temperature range 1200-1400°C. The materials are shown to be capable of splitting CO2 into CO fuel when isothermally cycled between low-pO2 and high-pCO2 environments at 1240°C and to approach full reoxidation in CO2 with temperature swings as low as 200°C, with mass-specific fuel yields up to tentimes that of CeO2. The underlying material thermodynamics are investigated and used to explain the favorable redox behavior. © 2015 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH
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Cooper, T., Scheffe, J. R., Galvez, M. E., Jacot, R., Patzke, G., & Steinfeld, A. (2015). Lanthanum Manganite Perovskites with Ca/Sr A-site and Al B-site Doping as Effective Oxygen Exchange Materials for Solar Thermochemical Fuel Production. Energy Technology, 3(11), 1130–1142. https://doi.org/10.1002/ente.201500226
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