Abstract

Molten manganese chloride (MnCl2) is attractive as a high-temperature liquid catalyst for methane pyrolysis (CH4 → C + 2H2). Nevertheless, the mechanism of this reaction for continuously producing high-purity hydrogen and graphitic carbon from CH4 has not been fully elucidated. In this work, we investigated the reaction kinetics and mechanism of CH4 pyrolysis in mixtures of molten MnCl2 with various monovalent or divalent chlorides. The apparent activation energies of the molten MnCl2 mixtures for CH4 pyrolysis (<230 kJ mol−1) were much lower than that of the uncatalyzed reaction (400 kJ mol−1). Among the MnCl2 mixtures, only MnCl2–KCl showed a lower apparent activation energy than pure MnCl2 (152 and 172 kJ mol−1, respectively). In addition, MnCl2–KCl produced the largest amount of CH2* and the final solid carbon product with the highest crystallinity, suggesting that this system has unique CH4 dehydrogenation and carbon formation pathways. Density functional theory calculations also predicted high concentrations of CH2* in MnCl2–KCl, as confirmed by CH2 formation being more thermodynamically favorable in MnCl2–KCl than in MnCl2. Furthermore, the generation of C2+ unsaturated intermediates from CHx* (x < 3) was thermodynamically favored, suggesting a more facile pathway for the formation of graphitic carbon layers in molten MnCl2–KCl. In addition, an NVT ab initio molecular dynamics simulation suggested that gas-phase C–C coupling was facilitated in MnCl2–KCl by the frequent reversible desorption and adsorption of CHx* intermediates. These fundamental insights into the origins of the enhanced CH4 pyrolysis performance in MnCl2–KCl could aid in the development of molten salt catalysts with enhanced reactivity.

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