Table 2.
Promising metal catalysts for supercritical water gasification of complex organic feedstocks.
Catalyst/support | Synthesis method | Properties & performance | Source |
---|---|---|---|
Ru/γ-Al2O3 | Commercially obtained | Highest catalytic activity for gasification of alkylphenols; decreased activity after transition from γ- to α-phase alumina; high activity for C-C bond cleavage | [18, 100, 103, 104, 108, 109] |
Ru/TiO2 | Commercially obtained | Highest catalytic activity for gasification of lignin; high activity for C-C bond cleavage | [110, 111, 112] |
RuO2 | Commercially obtained | Conversion superior to catalysis by NiO, MoO3, and ZrO2 | [105] |
Ru/C | Commercially obtained | High catalytic activity; decreased activity after repetitive use | [109, 110] |
Ni/γ-Al2O3 | Incipient wetness impregnation; Ni(NO3)2‧6H2O precursor | Highest catalytic activity and H2 selectivity of 17 supported transition metal catalysts tested for SCWG of glucose in [18] | [18, 100] |
Ni/SiO2 | Evaporative deposition; Ni(NO3)2‧6H2O precursor | High H2 selectivity; high activity for C-C bond cleavage | [113] |
Pt/SiO2 | Ion exchange at pH = 11; Pt(NH4)4(NO3)2 precursor | High H2 selectivity; moderate activity for C-C bond cleavage; low methanation rate | [113] |
CuO | In-situ hydrothermal generation of nanoparticles; Cu(CH3COO)2 precursor | High S/V ratio; effective catalyst for methanol reforming; not effective for cleaving C-C bonds of larger molecules | [107] |