Direct production of olefins from syngas with ultrahigh carbon efficiency

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Abstract

Syngas conversion serves as a competitive strategy to produce olefins chemicals from nonpetroleum resources. However, the goal to achieve desirable olefins selectivity with limited undesired C1 by-products remains a grand challenge. Herein, we present a non-classical Fischer-Tropsch to olefins process featuring high carbon efficiency that realizes 80.1% olefins selectivity with ultralow total selectivity of CH4 and CO2 (<5%) at CO conversion of 45.8%. This is enabled by sodium-promoted metallic ruthenium (Ru) nanoparticles with negligible water-gas-shift reactivity. Change in the local electronic structure and the decreased reactivity of chemisorbed H species on Ru surfaces tailor the reaction pathway to favor olefins production. No obvious deactivation is observed within 550 hours and the pellet catalyst also exhibits excellent catalytic performance in a pilot-scale reactor, suggesting promising practical applications.

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Yu, H., Wang, C., Lin, T., An, Y., Wang, Y., Chang, Q., … Zhong, L. (2022). Direct production of olefins from syngas with ultrahigh carbon efficiency. Nature Communications, 13(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-33715-w

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