Abstract:
The cobalt boride is used as catalyst for various important chemical reactions such as
hydrogenation of alkenes, citral, aldehyde, and reduction of nitrogen oxide, water splitting
reaction, ODH of propane, Oxygen Evolution Reaction, Na-O2 batteries, and hydrogen
generation. The unsupported and supported cobalt-boride catalysts have been prepared by
considering various method of synthesis. The supports used for the synthesis of supported
catalysts are ceria, carbon nanotubes, activated carbon, silica, titania, and alumina. The active
component of these catalysts is cobalt-boride and the species dispersed over the support
differently.
The objectives of the present thesis work were to study the generation of hydrogen from
sodium-borohydride using various catalysts/additives for fuel cell applications. The generation
of hydrogen was considered by a) hydrolysis of sodium borohydride solution using
supported/bulk metal-boride catalysts, and b) thermolysis of sodium borohydride using metal
halides additives.
Metal-boride catalysts were active for the hydrolysis of sodium borohydride at room
temperature. The bulk metal-boride catalysts (CoB, NiB, and FeB) were synthesized by simple
reduction precipitation method. The supported metal boride catalysts (CoB/SiO2) were
synthesized by two-step reduction precipitation followed by impregnation method. The surface
area of the metal-boride catalysts was also increased by using various support materials. Since
the metal-boride catalysts are not active for thermolysis of sodium borohydride for the
generation of hydrogen. The metal halide additive/catalysts composite mixtures were active for
the thermolysis of sodium borohydride at low temperature. The metal-halides
additives/catalysts were used for the thermolysis study are MnCl2, CaCl2, and ZnCl2. The
sodium-borohydride/additive composite mixtures were prepared by facile solution method. The
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bulk (CoB) or supported metal-boride (CoB/SiO2) catalysts or the composite mixture
(xMnCl2/NaBH4) were characterized using various characterization techniques to improve our
understanding of hydrogen generation from sodium borohydride by considering various factors
such as metal loading, effect of calcination temperature, effect of supports of catalysts, and the
effect of thermolysis temperature to find the most suitable additive. Moreover, the synthesized
catalysts and composite materials were characterized by BET, XRD, FE-SEM, in situ UV-vis
spectrophotometer, FTIR and Raman spectroscopy.
A series of CoB, FeB, and NiB catalysts were prepared by the chemical reduction
method using base stabilized sodium borohydride solution as a reducing agent. The CoB
catalyst was most stable and highly dispersed even at high calcination temperature. The
hydrolysis study suggested that CoB catalyst was most effective and suitable for the generation
of hydrogen from hydrolysis of sodium borohydride. The generation of hydrogen using base
stabilized CoB-BS catalysts was most active using both the base/without base stabilized
sodium-borohydride solution. The generation of hydrogen using base stabilized sodium
borohydride solution using various catalysts was as follows: CoB-BS > NiB-BS > FeB-BS.
The effect of support on the CoB catalysts were examined and studied. The supported
cobalt boride catalysts (xCoB/SiO2, xCoB/Al2O3, xCoB/MgO) were prepared by two-step
impregnation-reduction method. The synthesized catalysts were studied for the hydrolysis of
based stabilized sodium-borohydride solution for the generation of hydrogen. The synthesized
catalysts were characterized by using BET, XRD, and Raman spectroscopy techniques.
Various parameters such as catalysts loading, effects of calcination temperature, effect of
supports were considered. The synthesized catalysts were calcined at various calcination
temperature from 373 K to 773 K. The study suggested that the support plays a significant role
on enhancing the generation of hydrogen from base stabilized sodium borohydride solution.
Moreover, the calcination temperature also played a significant role in enhancing the catalytic
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performance. It was necessary to calcined the CoB impregnated support at moderate
temperature before reduction of the cobalt so that an active CoB is dispersed and anchored with
the support properly. The study suggested that the surface area gradually increased with
increasing calcination temperature up to 573 K and furthers increasing calcination temperature
the surface area decreased for the catalysts xCoB/(support). However, all the calcined samples
were highly amorphous in nature even at 673 K and started formation of crystalline phase at
773 K in 50CoB/Al2O3. It was also observed that a Co3O4 species formed with the CoB in all
catalysts during the second step of catalyst synthesis (reduction step). The most active catalyst
was found to be 50CoB/SiO2 calcined at 573 K. The order of catalytic activity for the
generation of hydrogen for all catalysts: 50CoB/SiO2 > 50CoB/Al2O3 > CoB > 50CoB/MgO.
The effect of additives/catalysts for the thermolysis of sodium borohydride is also
important for the generation of hydrogen. A series of MnCl2 impregnated sodium borohydride
composite mixture was prepared by facile solution method at room temperature. The additive
loading was varied from 10 wt% to 50 wt% during the synthesis of composite materials. Other
additives were also used such as CaCl2 and ZnCl2. However, the 20 wt% of additive was an
optimum loading for the synthesis of 20MnCl2/NaBH4 composite mixture. The generation of
hydrogen was obtained from the material 20MnCl2/NaBH4 at 373 K. The generation of
hydrogen increased with increasing thermolysis temperature (373 K to 823 K). However, the
study suggested that the generation of hydrogen was incomplete at 373 K from the material
20MnCl2/NaBH4. The most effective additive was found to be CaCl2. The addition of additive
assists in lowering the thermolysis temperature of NaBH4 for the generation of hydrogen. The
effect of additive considering various additives as as follows: 20CaCl2/NaBH4 >
20MnCl2/NaBH4 > 20ZnCl2/NaBH4. The FTIR analysis and thermolysis study suggested that
the generation of hydrogen was incomplete at low temperature (373 K).
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Thus, the generation of hydrogen from sodium borohydride (hydrolysis/thermolysis)
using various catalysts (supported/bulk) and metal-chloride additives with the information
obtained from various characterization studies of BET, XRD, FTIR, FE-SEM, and Raman
spectroscopy, the effect of various parameters could be established. The parameters included
the effect of metal in metal boride catalysts, effect of calcination temperature, effect of
supports, and effect of various additives.