Abstract
The CO2 methanation employing MgH2 as a source of hydrogen is investigated via mechano-chemical processes through ball milling at room temperature under different experimental conditions such as the presence/absence of catalyst, the milling duration, the molar ratio between the hydride and CO2 and the pre-milling of Ni–MgH2 mixture. The positive effect of Ni addition is demonstrated. After 5h of milling under CO2, the absence of catalyst causes the CH4 yield to drop from 70.0 to 59.0%, from 73.0 to 33.5% and from 54.0 to 40.1%, considering molar ratios of 4:1, 3:1 and 2:1, respectively. The pre-milling of nickel-catalyzed system or the addition of CNTs do not provide significant improvements. This investigation shows that similar methane yields to those obtained by thermo-chemical methods can be achieved, but involving shorter times (5 h versus 24 h) and lower temperatures (room temperature versus 400 °C). The ball collisions during milling allow overcoming passivation phenomena of MgH2 and Mg, promoting the methanation process but with lower selectivity as contamination with Fe from the milling jar provides a catalytic alternative route for the generation of C2–C3 hydrocarbons.
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