TY - JOUR
T1 - Solvent-free mechanochemical conversion of CO2 into mesoporous SiC
T2 - a green route to high-performance catalysts
AU - Lee, Hae In
AU - Seo, Myung Won
AU - Kim, Dong Hyun
AU - Choi, Hyuk
AU - Lee, Ju Hyeok
AU - Yoo, Mi
AU - Kim, Min Jae
AU - Ok, Yong Sik
AU - Raut, Siddheshwar Dadarao
AU - Lee, Dong Hyun
AU - Kim, Hyun You
AU - Lee, Kyubock
AU - Cho, Won Chul
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 RSC.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Silicon carbide (SiC) is a critical material across structural, electronic, and catalytic applications; however, its conventional synthesis via the Acheson process is highly energy-intensive, operating at 2200–2400 °C with low carbon efficiency. Herein, we report a novel, solvent-free mechanochemical synthesis of mesoporous SiC using CO2 as a sustainable carbon feedstock and SiO2/Mg as earth-abundant precursors. Through a two-step ball-milling process, SiO2 is first reduced by Mg to form Mg2Si, which then spontaneously reacts with CO2 to form SiC and MgO, achieving a high CO2 conversion efficiency of 84% at only 10% of the energy cost of conventional methods. Density functional theory (DFT) calculations confirm the thermodynamic feasibility of CO2 activation on Mg2Si. The produced mesoporous SiC exhibited excellent durability and served as a highly stable support for Ni catalysts in dry reforming of methane (CH4 + CO2 → H2 + CO), maintaining performance over 100 hours with minimal coke formation. This work introduces a green, scalable route for synthesizing high-value SiC, integrating CO2 utilization and catalyst development under the principles of green chemistry.
AB - Silicon carbide (SiC) is a critical material across structural, electronic, and catalytic applications; however, its conventional synthesis via the Acheson process is highly energy-intensive, operating at 2200–2400 °C with low carbon efficiency. Herein, we report a novel, solvent-free mechanochemical synthesis of mesoporous SiC using CO2 as a sustainable carbon feedstock and SiO2/Mg as earth-abundant precursors. Through a two-step ball-milling process, SiO2 is first reduced by Mg to form Mg2Si, which then spontaneously reacts with CO2 to form SiC and MgO, achieving a high CO2 conversion efficiency of 84% at only 10% of the energy cost of conventional methods. Density functional theory (DFT) calculations confirm the thermodynamic feasibility of CO2 activation on Mg2Si. The produced mesoporous SiC exhibited excellent durability and served as a highly stable support for Ni catalysts in dry reforming of methane (CH4 + CO2 → H2 + CO), maintaining performance over 100 hours with minimal coke formation. This work introduces a green, scalable route for synthesizing high-value SiC, integrating CO2 utilization and catalyst development under the principles of green chemistry.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105018510898
U2 - 10.1039/d5mr00091b
DO - 10.1039/d5mr00091b
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105018510898
SN - 2976-8683
JO - RSC Mechanochemistry
JF - RSC Mechanochemistry
ER -