High CO2 Conversion via Plasma Assisted Reverse Water-Gas Shift Reaction over Ag/ZnO Catalyst

Chunhong Pan, Biao Wang, Jinman Mao, Mengjia Li, Feng Gao, Wenyi Chen, Huimin Wang, Guoping Hu, Xiaolei Fan, Feng Huang

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Reverse Water-Gas Shift (RWGS) reaction represents a strategic pathway for CO2 utilization. Despite its potential, RWGS via conventional thermal-catalysis faces several challenges, including low equilibrium conversion rates due to thermodynamic constraints, high energy consumption, and insufficient product selectivity. Here, this study demonstrates an evident synergetic effect between plasma and Ag/ZnO, on enhancing RWGS. The plasma catalytic system achieved significantly improved performance with a remarkable CO2 conversion rate of 76.5%, a high CO selectivity of 96.8%, and a CO yield of 74.1%, along with an energy efficiency as high as 0.19 mmol·kJ−1, surpassing the plasma alone system and ZnO catalytic systems. Results from X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and Auger electron spectroscopy (AES) confirm the presence of electronic metal-support interactions (EMSI) between Ag and ZnO, which facilitates the formation of electron-deficient Ag sites and partially reduced ZnOx species. These reactive sites, along with oxygen vacancies created during reduction treatment, enhance the adsorption and activation of H2 and CO2, offering a dominant plasma-assisted surface reaction pathway for the improved RWGS. These findings underscore the crucial role of EMSI in manipulating surface environments to facilitate efficient plasma-assisted catalytic reactions, with significant implications for the rational design of catalysts capable of converting CO2 efficiently under mild conditions.
Original languageEnglish
JournalFrontiers of Chemical Science and Engineering
Publication statusAccepted/In press - 18 May 2025

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'High CO2 Conversion via Plasma Assisted Reverse Water-Gas Shift Reaction over Ag/ZnO Catalyst'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this