Layered Double Hydroxide (LDH)-Derived Mixed Oxides for Enhanced Light Hydrocarbon Production from CO2 Hydrogenation

Evridiki Mandela, Antigoni G. Margellou, Athanasia Kotsaridou, George E. Marnellos, Michalis Konsolakis, Konstantinos S. Triantafyllidis*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

3 Scopus citations

Abstract

Layered double hydroxide (LDH)-derived mixed oxides offer a promising approach for CO2 hydrogenation to light hydrocarbons. Herein, we explore the impact of various transition metals (X = Mn, Co, Cu, and Zn) incorporated into the M-Al or M-(Al+Fe) LDH structures, with the aim of exploring possible synergistic effects. Structural and compositional analyses reveal that an abundance of Fe over Al (Fe/Al ratio ~4) leads to the formation of mixed oxide crystalline phases attributed to CoFe2O4, CuFe2O4, and ZnFe2O4. Catalytic evaluation results demonstrate that the X-Al LDH-derived oxides exhibit high CO2 conversion yet are selective to CH4 or CO. In contrast, Fe incorporation shifts selectivity toward higher hydrocarbons. Specifically, the yield to higher hydrocarbons (C2+) follows the order Ζn-Al-Fe > Cu-Al-Fe > Mn-Al-Fe > Co-Al-Fe >> Mn-Al, Co-Al, Zn-Al, Cu-Al, highlighting the pivotal role of Fe. Moreover, Zn-Al-Fe and Mn-Al-Fe catalysts have been shown to be the most selective towards light olefins. Zn-based systems also exhibit high thermal and structural stability with minimal coke formation, whereas Co-, Cu-, and Mn-based catalysts, when modified with Fe, experience increased carbon deposition or structural changes that may impact long-term stability. This work provides insights into the combined role of Fe and a second transition metal in LDHs for modulating catalytic activity, phase transformations, and stability, underscoring the need for further optimization to balance selectivity and catalyst durability in CO2 hydrogenation applications.

Original languageEnglish
Article number323
JournalCatalysts
Volume15
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 by the authors.

Keywords

  • CO hydrogenation
  • Fe-modified catalysts
  • higher hydrocarbons
  • layered double hydroxides
  • transition metal oxides

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Catalysis
  • General Environmental Science
  • Physical and Theoretical Chemistry

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Layered Double Hydroxide (LDH)-Derived Mixed Oxides for Enhanced Light Hydrocarbon Production from CO2 Hydrogenation'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this