Abstract
Solar-driven photothermal conversion of carbon dioxide (CO2 ) to methane (CH4 ) is a promising approach to remedy energy shortage and climate changes, where highly efficient photothermal catalysts for CO2 methanation urgently need to be designed. Herein, nickel-based catalysts (Ni/ZrO2 ) derived from metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) are fabricated and studied for photothermal CO2 methanation. The optimized catalyst 50Ni/ZrO2 achieves a stable CH4 production rate of 583.3 mmol g-1 h-1 in a continuous stability test, which is almost tenfold higher than that of 50Ni/C-ZrO2 synthesized via commercial ZrO2 . Physicochemical properties indicate that 50Ni/ZrO2 generates more tetragonal ZrO2 and possesses more oxygen vacancies (OVs) as well as enhanced nickel-ZrO2 interaction. As a result, 50Ni/ZrO2 exhibits the strong abilities of light absorption and light-to-heat conversion, superior adsorption capacities of reactants (H2 , CO2 ), and an intermediate product (CO), which finally boosts CH4 formation. This work provides an efficient strategy to design a photothermocatalyst of CO2 methanation through utilizing MOFs-derived support.
