Abstract
Chemical looping combustion (CLC) and catalytic combustion (CC), which are potential technologies to promote CO→CO2 efficient conversion and energy conservation for the steelmaking off-gas, are investigated in reaction activity, structure evolution catalysts/oxygen carriers (OCs) and energy recovery using Cu/CeO2 materials. Activity results suggest that the rod-shaped samples with well-defined (100) crystal faces exhibit higher activity than the sphere-shaped samples with (111) crystal faces, obtaining the optimized copper content of 3 wt%. IR spectra confirmed the proposed reaction pathway that the CO adsorbed on copper sites (Cu+–CO) at the Cu–Ce interface reacts with adjacent surface lattice oxygen. The gaseous oxygen continuously migrates to the external surface of materials, thus resulting in strongly exothermic CO self-sustained combustion during CC. Such a violent reaction does not cause obvious evolution of chemical composition, crystalline phase and structure. Since the active lattice oxygen is gradually consumed but not replenished by external gaseous O2 in time, CO combustion is not self-sustained during CLC. Therefore, the reduction cycle is no longer confined to the surface of the material but penetrates deep into its body, which accelerates Cu+ enrichment at the surface and leads to irreversible sintering and agglomeration of the material.
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