Peering into buried interfaces with X-rays and electrons to unveil MgCO3 formation during CO2 capture in molten salt-promoted MgO
Abstract
The addition of molten alkali metal salts drastically accelerates the kinetics of CO2 capture by MgO through the formation of MgCO3. However, the growth mechanism, the nature of MgCO3 formation, and the exact role of the molten alkali metal salts on the CO2 capture process remain elusive, holding back the development of more-effectiveMgO-based CO2 sorbents. Here, we unveil the growth mechanism of MgCO3 under practically relevant conditions using a well-defined, yet representative, model system that is a MgO(100) single crystal coated with NaNO3. The model system is interrogated by in situ X-ray reflectometry coupled with grazing incidence X-ray diffraction, scanning electron microscopy, and high-resolution transmission electron microscopy. When bare MgO(100) is exposed to a flow of CO2, a noncrystalline surface carbonate layer of ca. 7-Å thickness forms. In contrast, when MgO(100) is coated with NaNO3, MgCO3 crystals nucleate and grow. These crystals have a preferential orientation with respect to the MgO(100) substrate, and form at the interface between MgO(100) and the molten NaNO3. MgCO3 grows epitaxially with respect to MgO(100), and the lattice mismatch between MgCO3 and MgO is relaxed through lattice misfit dislocations. Pyramid-shaped pits on the surface ofMgO, in proximity to and below the MgCO3 crystals, point to the etching of surface MgO, providing dissolved [Mg2+ O2-] ionic pairs forMgCO3 growth. Our studies highlight the importance of combining X-rays and electron microscopy techniques to provide atomic to micrometer scale insight into the changes occurring at complex interfaces under reactive conditions. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000491567Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of AmericaVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
National Academy of SciencesOrganisational unit
03865 - Müller, Christoph R. / Müller, Christoph R.
Funding
819573 - Advancing CO2 Capture Materials by Atomic Scale Design: the Quest for Understanding (EC)
156015 - Next generation CaO-based CO2 sorbents: X-ray absorption spectroscopy and advanced electron microscopy techniques (SNF)
ETH-44 16-2 - The direct integration of CO2 conversion into CO2 capture: Development of model bi-functional Cu-MgO-MOx materials through the elucidation of the carbonation mechanism and active sites for CO2 hydrogenation (ETHZ)
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