论文标题
在电池中给甲烷热解的碳副产品带动
Valorizing the carbon byproduct of methane pyrolysis in batteries
论文作者
论文摘要
虽然低成本的天然气保持丰富,但通过通过甲烷热解的产生分子氢和固体碳,可以利用这种燃料的能量含量。在没有碳税的情况下,除非碳副产品可以被价值化,否则甲烷热解在经济上不具有当前的氢生产方法。在这项工作中,我们评估了在熔融盐中甲烷热解产生的碳副产物的生存能力,作为高价值增添阳极或用于二级锂离子和NA-ION电池的导电添加剂。拉曼表征和电化学差异能力分析表明,使用催化活性FECL3-或MNCL2的熔融盐混合物会导致更多的石墨碳coprouctss。当用作锂离子阳极时,这些石墨碳表现出最好的电化学性能(可逆能力高达272 mAh/g)。对于此处研究的所有碳样品,通过X射线光电子和多核固态核磁共振光谱鉴定了碳结构域和被困在碳结构中的保留和/或插入碳结构的盐。与商业碳阳极相比,后者导致电化学活性和可逆性降低,速度较差。发现热解的碳的电子电导率高度依赖于它们的纯度,最纯的碳表现出电子电导率几乎与商用碳添加剂相当。这些发现表明,更有效地去除盐催化剂可以使这些碳在二级电池中施用,从而为大规模实施甲烷热解提供了低碳氢生产的经济激励。
While low-cost natural gas remains abundant, the energy content of this fuel can be utilized without greenhouse gas emissions through the production of molecular hydrogen and solid carbon via methane pyrolysis. In the absence of a carbon tax, methane pyrolysis is not economically competitive with current hydrogen production methods unless the carbon byproducts can be valorized. In this work, we assess the viability of the carbon byproduct produced from methane pyrolysis in molten salts as high-value-added anode or conductive additive for secondary Li-ion and Na-ion batteries. Raman characterization and electrochemical differential capacity analysis demonstrate that the use of molten salt mixtures with catalytically-active FeCl3- or MnCl2 result in more graphitic carbon co-products. These graphitic carbons exhibit the best electrochemical performance (up to 272 mAh/g of reversible capacity) when used as Li-ion anodes. For all carbon samples studied here, disordered carbon domains and retained salt species trapped and/or intercalated into the carbon structure were identified by X-ray photoelectron and multinuclear solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. The latter lead to reduced electrochemical activity and reversibility, and poorer rate performance compared to commercial carbon anodes. The electronic conductivity of the pyrolyzed carbons is found to be highly dependent on their purity, with the purest carbon exhibiting an electronic conductivity nearly on par with that of commercial carbon additives. These findings suggest that more effective removal of the salt catalyst could enable applications of these carbons in secondary batteries, providing a financial incentive for the large-scale implementation of methane pyrolysis for low-carbon hydrogen production.