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Promoting proximity to enhance Fe-Ca interaction for efficient integrated CO2 capture and hydrogenation
Integrated CO 2 capture and utilization (ICCU) using “capture-conversion” dual functional materials (DFMs) paves a cost-effective path for restricting CO 2 emissions by eliminating the energy-intensive intermediate processes. The interactions between catalysts and absorbents are believed pivotal in ICCU; however, there is a lack of environment-friendly strategy to fabricate the interaction for industrial applications. Here, we propose a solvent-free mechanochemical approach to promote the interaction by improving the proximity between natural calcium and iron sources. The interaction was systemically investigated and confirmed using XRD, XPS, TEM, TPR, etc. As a result, the mechanochemical approach derived DFM achieved 5.5 mmol g −1 CO 2 capacity, 87 % CO 2 conversion, and 100 % CO selectivity at 650 °C, significantly outperforming the CaO-alone benchmark (CO 2 capacity < 4.5 mmol g −1 , CO 2 conversion < 73 %). Further incorporating MgO would alleviate the sintering and promote the CO 2 capture stability (< 15 % decrease after 20 cycles) by acting as a thermal-stable barrier. Based on in situ XRD, it is further confirmed that Fe-Ca interaction exhibits a dynamic looping mechanism in ICCU. The techno-economic analysis strongly supports the superiority of ICCU catalyzed by naturally sourced DFMs on eliminating the energy and H 2 consumption for CO 2 capture and upgradation. As a result, producing CO via ICCU using mechanochemical derived DFMs exhibits 20 % and 10 % cost decrease compared to the conventional CCU and ICCU using CaO alone scenarios, pointing out the potential of ICCU technology in industrial applications.