Core-shell structured Ni-SiO
2@CeO
2 catalyst, with nickel NPs encapsulated between the silica support and ceria shell, was evaluated by Das et al.
[91] in biogas DR (CH
4/CO
2 ratio of 1.5). Ni-phyllosilicate was used as the Ni precursor to produce highly dispersed Ni NPs on SiO
2. The Ni-SiO
2@CeO
2 catalyst presented excellent stability at 600 °C, with no coke detected after 72 h on stream. The higher activity of the core-shell catalyst was related to the high Ni dispersion and reducibility. The CeO
2 shell effectively inhibited the growth of filamentous carbon around the active Ni center. On the other hand, the Ni-SiO
2 catalyst deactivated during 22 h on stream due to the large deposition of coke and reactor blockage, while the Ni/CeO
2 catalyst showed very low activity. Han et al.
[92] prepared a (Ni/CeO
2)@SiO
2 catalyst by confining Ni NPs and CeO
2 nanocrystals in SiO
2 nanospheres. (Ni/CeO
2)@SiO
2 catalyst showed higher activity for DRM than Ni@SiO
2, which was associated with the smaller size of Ni nanoparticles and the promoting effect of CeO
2 on CO
2 activation. The silica shell confined the migration of the core components during the reaction, providing resistance to sintering. The Ni-CeO
2@SiO
2 catalyst was also evaluated by Lin et al.
[93] in DRM, and no carbon deposition was observed during 100 h of stability testing at 800 °C. The superior coking and sintering resistance of this catalyst was related to the confinement effect of the porous silica shell and the synergistic interaction between Ni and CeO
2 NPs.
Liu et al.
[94] developed core-shell Ni-ZrO
2@SiO
2 catalysts with zirconia-modified nickel NPs (Ni-ZrO
2) as the core and microporous silica as the shell. The Ni-ZrO
2@SiO
2 catalyst showed high stability during 240 h of DRM reaction at 800 °C with no coke formation, while Ni@SiO
2 deactivated in 20 h of reaction. The addition of ZrO
2 enhanced NiO reducibility and confined Ni species inside the silica shell, inhibiting Ni sintering. Moreover, ZrO
2 provided an abundance of activated oxygen to Ni NPs, improving their resistance to coking.
Ce
1−xZr
xO
2 mixed oxides have also been used in Ni core-shell catalysts. Das et al.
[95] studied the effect of Zr doping on core-shell Ni-phyllosilicate@Ce
1−xZr
xO
2 catalysts (x = 0 to 0.2). In these core-shell catalysts, the particle size of Ni and its growth during reduction/reaction were independent of the Zr doping. The catalysts with x = 0.05–0.1 in the Ce
1−xZr
xO
2 shell presented a significant increase in the intrinsic activity for DRM at 600 °C. The enhancement in DRM activity by a small amount of Zr doping was attributed to the increase in lattice oxygen mobility of the ceria–zirconia shell and stronger metal-support interaction with Ni. They proposed that the lattice oxygen of the ceria-zirconia at the interface with Ni promotes the oxidation of coke precursors and the dissociation of methane. Marinho et al.
[96] synthesized Ni@CeZrO
2 (with a Ce/Zr molar ratio of 4.0) and Ni@CeO
2 core-shell catalysts by the sol–gel method and compared them with Ni/CeO
2 prepared by impregnation. The control of Ni particle size and the high oxygen mobility of the Ni@CeZrO
2 catalyst inhibited carbon deposition over 24 h of the DRM reaction at 800 °C. This same research group studied the effect of metal dopants on the performance of Ni@CeMeO
2 (Me = Gd, Sm, and Zr) catalysts for DRM
[97]. The doping with Zr improved the thermal stability of the catalyst, leading to the formation of small Ni NPs, while Ni metal sintering was observed for Ni@CeO
2, Ni@CeGdO
2, and Ni@CeSmO
2. The Ni@CeZrO
2 catalyst showed higher resistance to coke formation during the DRM reaction because of its smaller Ni crystallite size and higher ceria reducibility. On the other hand, the larger Ni particles and poor redox behavior of Ni@CeGdO
2 and Ni@CeSmO
2 were responsible for the high carbon formation on these catalysts.
2.3. Bimetallic Catalysts
Industrially, Ni-based catalysts are the most widely used for DRM. However, they have some drawbacks, such as catalytic deactivation due to coke deposition and sintering and low catalytic activity when compared to catalysts based on noble metals. An effective strategy to improve the performance of nickel-based catalysts is to use bimetallic Ni catalysts
[98][99]. By forming alloys of Ni with other metals, such as transition metals (Co, Cu, Fe) and noble metals (Pt, Rh, Ru), it is possible to enhance reducibility, increase the specific surface area, reduce the size of metallic particles, and inhibit carbon deposition, resulting in a better performance than that of a single Ni catalyst
[100].
2.3.1. Ni and Transition Metals
Among Ni-based bimetallic catalysts, Ni-Co bimetallic catalysts have received significant interest. Part of this stems from findings that adding Co to Ni catalysts improves coke formation resistance and increases chemical stability. In addition, bimetallic catalysts demonstrate superior metallic dispersion compared to monometallic catalysts of Ni or Co
[101][102][103]. Studies show that Co-based catalysts can reduce the rate of coke formation by oxidizing the carbon deposited on the surface
[104][105]. However, monometallic Co catalysts show poor catalytic performance in DRM, which is the main reason for their lower application compared to Ni-based catalysts
[106].
Kim et al.
[102] prepared a series of catalysts with a fixed Ni content (7.5 wt.%) and Co contents in the range from 0 to 9 wt.% using the evaporation-induced self-assembly (EISA) method. The catalysts were evaluated in the steam methane reforming process. The optimal Co content was 5 wt.%, related to the higher relative concentration of Ni°/Ni
total (37.6%) on the catalyst surface determined by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). Depending on the reaction conditions, a total CH
4 conversion was obtained (GHSV = 10,000 mL gcat−1 h−1 and 800 °C). Adding Co to the catalysts drastically reduced the coke production rate and improved the catalytic efficiency during steam methane reforming.
You et al.
[107] prepared and evaluated a series of Ni–Co/γ-Al
2O
3 bimetallic catalysts with a fixed loading of 12 wt.% Ni but with different Co contents for CH
4 steam reforming. The results showed that adding Co can effectively improve the resistance to coke formation and the reaction stability of the Ni/Al
2O
3 catalyst, with a reasonable loss of catalytic activity at lower temperatures (650–750 °C). However, at 800 °C and with GHSV = 18,000 mL gcat−1 h−1, the Ni-Co bimetallic catalysts exhibited the same activity as the Ni/Al
2O
3 catalyst (CH
4 conversion around 90–95%) but with improvements promoted by Co, i.e., reduction in coke production rate and maintenance of catalytic activity during the evaluated period (160 h). XRD and transmission electron microscopy analyses of the reduced catalysts showed that adding Co leads to the formation of Ni-Co alloys on the surface, which play a fundamental role in suppressing coke formation in bimetallic Ni-Co catalysts. However, Ni-Co alloy formation can also block part of the low-coordination Ni active sites and decrease metallic dispersion.
Sheng et al.
[105] suggested that Ni and Co act as catalysts for CH
4 decomposition and CO
2 reduction, respectively, during the DRM reaction, and the carbon deposits combine with active oxygen to release CO, thus regenerating the metal surface. The same result was evidenced by Horlyck et al.
[108]. In their work, the investigation of the side reactions (Boudouard, methane cracking, and reverse water-gas shift) demonstrated that Co has a high affinity for removing carbon species deposited via oxidation. At the same time, Ni is more active in the decomposition of CH
4. Furthermore, even a low Co load (2.5 wt.%) in the catalysts promotes increased resistance to carbon deposition.
The proportion between Ni and Co in the bimetallic catalyst is a factor that affects methane conversion and synthesis gas quality in reforming processes. Lyu et al.
[109] synthesized different Ni-Co/Al
2O
3 bimetallic catalysts. Keeping the Ni loading fixed at 5 wt.%, the Co content was varied to obtain Co/Ni molar ratios of 0.3, 0.5, 0.7, and 0.9. Employing these catalysts in the DRM at 700 °C, the results showed that the catalyst with a molar ratio of 0.5 presented the best catalytic performance during the 100 h of reaction, presenting CO
2 and CH
4 conversions of 81.6% and 73.1%, respectively. A similar result was observed by Zolghadri et al.
[110] in the steam reforming of methane at 700 °C. Among different Ni-Co/Al
2O
3-based catalysts, the 10Ni-10Co catalyst presented the best results, with the highest CH
4 conversion and H
2 yield and the lowest carbon deposition due to improved dispersion of Ni and Co particles.
Several studies show that the Ni-Cu alloy presents better results when compared to Ni monometallic catalysts
[111][112][113][114][115], and like Ni, Cu has low costs compared to noble metals. Ni and Cu have a face-centered cubic (fcc) crystalline structure and a similar atomic radius with lattice parameters a = 3.524 Å and 3.615 Å, respectively. Such characteristics favor the formation of a homogeneous solid solution of Ni-Cu. However, Cu tends to segregate on the surface of the Ni/Cu alloy, depending on the temperature and reaction conditions
[116][117].
Kitla et al.
[118] demonstrated, using the techniques of hydrogen chemisorption and FTIR spectroscopy of CO adsorption, that regardless of the nominal bulk composition of the catalysts, the surface of the bimetallic particles was substantially enriched by Cu with almost the same composition. Naghash et al.
[119] observed that at high reduction temperatures (700 °C) and Cu loadings, Cu tended to segregate to reduce interfacial surface energies. Song et al.
[120] observed through X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) that the surface of the catalysts presents a Cu/Ni molar ratio much higher than the bulk, indicating that the alloy surface is enriched in Cu. In this study, employing hydrotalcite-like compounds (HTlcs) as catalytic precursors, the authors evaluated the effect of monometallic catalysts (Ni and Cu) and four other catalysts with molar ratios of Cu/Ni = 0.1, 0.25, 0.5, and 1.0 in DRM (reaction conditions: 600 °C, CH
4/CO
2/N
2 = 1/1/2, SV = 60,000 mL gcat−1 h−1). The Ni monometallic catalyst initially showed a slight increase in the CH
4 and CO
2 conversions and H
2/CO ratio with time on stream, with a maximum of 51%, 63%, and 0.8, respectively. However, the conversions and the H
2/CO ratio decreased after approximately 10 h on the stream, which was attributed to catalytic deactivation by coke formation. On the other hand, the Cu monometallic catalyst showed much lower conversions (<5%), indicating that metallic Cu has low activity for the reaction. The performance of bimetallic catalysts was dependent on the alloy composition. Catalysts with Cu/Ni ratios = 0.25 and 0.5 showed a drastic improvement in catalytic performance, and both catalysts exhibited stable activity during the investigated period (25 h), with high resistance to coke formation. This resistance was associated with a decrease in CH
4 decomposition and an increase in CO
2 dissociation as a result of Ni-Cu alloying. The activity of the Cu/Ni = 0.25 catalyst is close to that of thermodynamic equilibrium and slightly higher than that of the Cu/Ni = 0.5 catalyst, which can be attributed to the higher number of Ni active sites on the surface. At higher Cu loading (Cu/Ni = 1.0), there is a decrease in activity and catalytic stability, indicating that there exists an optimal Ni-Cu composition.
Nataj et al.
[121] observed similar results using different contents of Ni (5, 7.5, and 10 wt.%) and Cu (0, 1, 2, 3, and 4 wt.%) supported on alumina in the DRM. Under optimized conditions, it was observed that low Cu contents (1 wt.%) promoted high activity and catalytic stability with higher resistance to coke deposition as well as high resistance to sintering of the active phase. However, catalysts with high Cu loadings (2, 3, and 4 wt.%) were less active and deactivated, mainly due to active site sintering and Ni coverage by the Cu-enriched phase. Under optimized conditions, using a catalyst with 10 wt.% of Ni and 0.83 wt.% of Cu at 750 °C, CH
4 and CO
2 conversions above 95% were obtained with a H
2/CO ratio = 1. A similar result was observed by Lee et al.
[122] in DRM. Catalysts with 10 wt.% Ni supported on γ-Al
2O
3 were prepared with 1, 5, 7.5, and 10 wt.% Cu by the wet impregnation method. The 1 wt.% Cu addition to the Ni/Al
2O
3 catalyst improved the stability and activity during 16 h on stream, showing a stable CH
4 conversion of about 90%. This increase in performance was associated with the suppression of carbon deposition. However, catalysts with content greater than 5 wt.% Cu deactivated faster (8–10 h) than the Ni/Al
2O
3 catalyst due to the increased coke deposition.
Han et al.
[123] evaluated DRM on catalysts with low loadings of Ni (4 wt.%) and Cu (0.2, 0.5, and 1.5 wt.%) supported on SiO
2, which were prepared by electrostatic adsorption of the Ni-ammonia and Cu-ammonia complexes. Over the entire temperature range evaluated (600–750 °C), the catalyst with a Cu content of 0.5 wt.% was the one that presented the highest performance, displaying conversions of CH
4, CO
2, and H
2/CO ratios around 80%, 85%, and 0.9, respectively. Except for the catalyst with 0.5 wt.% Cu, all catalysts showed activity loss with time on stream (50 h) at 750 °C. The superior performance of this catalyst was associated with the smaller alloy size and an appropriate addition of Cu, which promoted CO
2 activation. The authors also observed that a higher Cu loading (1.5 wt.%) favors the formation of Cu clusters, which could cover more Ni atoms on the surface and make CH
4 activation more difficult.
The synergistic effect between Ni and Fe has been investigated by several researchers in methane reforming. Although Fe has low activity in methane steam reforming, it has high activity in the WGSR reaction and easily forms alloys with Ni
[124]. The study carried out by Kim et al.
[125], combining the techniques
operarando XRD and X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS), observed that under DRM conditions, the Fe is partially oxidized to FeO, leading to partial segregation and the formation of a Ni-rich NiFe alloy. FeO is preferably formed on the catalyst surface, which reacts through a redox mechanism with carbon deposits to form CO, and then the Ni-Fe alloy is regenerated. The authors proposed that due to the absence of detection of any phase of FeO in the XRD, FeO is likely to be located on the surface as small domains covering a fraction of the surface of the Ni-rich particles, thus providing that carbon removal sites (FeO) are close enough to active sites (Ni) for methane reforming. These findings may explain the increased catalytic stability of bimetallic Ni-Fe catalysts.
The control of the composition of the Ni-Fe alloy is fundamental for good catalytic performance, and this is directly related to the preparation method of the catalysts
[126]. As highlighted by Tomishige et al.
[126], traditional methods such as co-impregnation are not efficient for producing uniform Ni-Fe alloy particles, as is the case with the impregnation of Ni in mixed oxide supports containing Fe. The Ni-Fe alloy is generated during the reduction; however, controlling the Ni/Fe ratio is very difficult. Otherwise, synthesizing catalysts using precursor oxides containing Ni and Fe, such as hydrotalcite-type compounds and perovskites, is more effective for obtaining Ni-Fe alloy particles with a controlled composition. The effect of Fe in the Ni-Fe alloy has positive and negative aspects for the catalytic activity. The breaking of C-H bonds occurs mainly on the surface of Ni atoms, and the formation of the Ni-Fe alloy decreases the number of surface Ni atoms. On the other hand, Fe can be oxidized more easily than Ni, and the presence of oxidized Fe species is related to positive aspects since this is where the carbonaceous species are oxidized
[126]. Therefore, synthesizing catalysts with an adequate Fe composition in the Ni-Fe alloy is fundamental for obtaining high activity and stability.
Braga et al.
[124] synthesized Ni and Fe catalysts supported on CeO
2 by two different methodologies, incipient wetness impregnation (IWI) and mechanochemical ball milling (BM), and evaluated the performance of these catalysts in the steam reforming of methane. The characterization of the catalysts showed that adding Fe increased the dispersion of Ni-Fe particles compared to the monometallic catalyst (Ni/CeO
2). Catalysts synthesized by the mechanochemical methodology showed the highest reducibility and H
2 production rate, and these results were correlated to smaller particle sizes (Ni or NiFe) and stronger metal-support interactions. The performance of the Fe
0.1Ni
0.9/CeO
2-BM catalyst was similar to that of the monometallic catalyst at high temperatures (950 °C). However, coke formation was practically null on the bimetallic catalyst, while the monometallic catalyst showed high coke deposition, even in the catalytic evaluation carried out for a few hours.
Li et al.
[127] prepared Ni and Fe catalysts with the content of metal Ni and Fe of 7.25% and 2.49% for Ni
3Fe
1/Al
2O
3 and 4.98% and 5.03% for Ni
1Fe
1/Al
2O
3, respectively, by an evaporation-induced self-assembly method. Both catalysts showed relative stability in DRM during the evaluated period (50 h). However, the catalyst with equimolar content (Ni
1Fe
1/Al
2O
3) showed higher CH
4 and CO
2 conversion values and higher H
2/CO molar ratios. This result was associated with the greater availability of FeO
x in the dealloying process offered by the catalyst in the equimolar composition. The authors observed a structural evolution of the Ni-Fe alloy during DRM. Due to the segregation of Fe from Ni-Fe alloys during DRM, the spent Ni
1Fe
1/Al
2O
3 and Ni
3Fe
1/Al
2O
3 catalysts formed particles of Ni
3Fe
1 alloy and Ni, respectively.
Song et al.
[128] evaluated the effect of adding Fe on the Ni/Al
2O
3 catalyst in low-temperature DRM. The catalysts were synthesized by a modified evaporation-induced self-assembly (mEISA) method, including a microwave treatment and an EISA process. The performance of the bimetallic catalyst (9.6 wt.% Ni and 4.2 wt.% Fe) was superior to that of the monometallic catalyst (15.7 wt.% Ni) in the entire temperature range evaluated (400–550 °C), with a maximum conversion of 26.6% to CH
4 and 37.8% for CO
2 and with an H
2/CO molar ratio close to 0.7. During the stability tests, the bimetallic catalyst showed stable catalytic activity throughout the evaluated period (20 h). On the other hand, the monometallic catalyst showed a gradual reduction in the conversion of CH
4 and CO
2. The characterizations of the spent catalysts showed that on the NiFe/Al
2O
3 catalyst, there was the formation of FeO
x due to the segregation of Fe, and this promoted the stabilization of the metallic state of Ni. Three species of carbon deposition were identified in the spent catalysts: active carbon (C
α), less active carbonaceous species (C
β), and inactive graphitic carbon (C
γ). The authors observed that in the absence of Fe in the catalyst, the active species of C
α could not be converted quickly and effectively into CO. These species accumulated and crystallized, generating even more carbonaceous species of the C
β and C
γ types, leading to the deactivation of the Ni/Al
2O
3 catalyst. Furthermore, there was a large formation of carbon filaments and encapsulated coke with high graphitization on the Ni/Al
2O
3 catalyst and only partially encapsulated coke with low graphitization on the NiFe/Al
2O
3 catalyst. Thus, forming the metallic alloy (Ni-Fe) increased the resistance to coke deposition.
Thalinger et al.
[129] synthesized two perovskites, La
0.6Sr
0.4FeO
3−δ (lanthanum strontium ferrite, LSF) and SrTi
0.7Fe
0.3O
3-δ (strontium titanium ferrite, STF), and then the perovskites were impregnated with Ni (10 mol%). The Ni/Al
2O
3 catalyst was synthesized by coprecipitation as a reference. After treatment with H
2, Ni-Fe alloy formation was observed due to Fe exsolution in LSF and STF catalysts. However, the LSF catalyst showed higher Ni-Fe alloying due to its greater reducibility than STF, which suppressed catalytic performance in methane steam reforming. The more reducible the perovskite support, the stronger the deviation from the catalytic behavior of Ni/Al
2O
3. The authors concluded that the activity of supported Ni–Fe catalysts could be controlled by carefully selecting the complex oxide support and reduction conditions.
2.3.2. Ni and Noble Metals
The literature unanimously points out that the main factors affecting the stability of Ni catalysts in DRM are related to coke formation and sintering processes. Both processes are related to the high temperatures typically employed in DRM. The sintering process is thermodynamically favored by the high temperatures used in DRM, resulting in losses of metal surface area and, consequently, a decrease in the number of active sites of the catalyst. Activity loss can also occur due to carbon deposition on the catalyst’s active sites. Furthermore, the DRM operation can be interrupted by reactor obstruction caused by excessive coke formation
[130][131].
Several measures can be taken to prevent the processes that lead to the deactivation of Ni-based catalysts. One of these measures is controlling the size of the metallic sites on the surface because the sites that produce carbon are larger than those required for CH
4 reforming. By forming alloys of Ni with noble metals, it is possible to control the size of the metallic sites and thus regulate the deposition and gasification of carbon on the catalysts
[100][131][132]. This effect can be observed in the work of Pawelec et al.
[133], where different Pt (0.3–0.5 wt.%) and Ni (1–12 wt.%) catalysts supported on ZSM-5 zeolite were prepared and evaluated in DRM at 500 °C. The catalytic test conducted using the Pt6Ni catalyst (0.5 wt.% Pt and 6 wt.% Ni) showed no significant deactivation during the evaluated period, and the stability of this catalyst was attributed to the presence of small Ni metal particles on the catalyst surface, which were generated by a “dilution” effect promoted by Pt, resulting in higher Ni dispersion. Although carbon formation was not completely suppressed, it was significantly reduced during the catalytic test conducted with the Pt6Ni catalyst. Furthermore, the deposition of carbon on the surface of the Ni crystals did not significantly affect the catalytic activity of this catalyst.
The activity of Pt and Ni bimetallic catalysts can also be enhanced by the synthesis methodology employed. García-Diéguez et al.
[131] synthesized monometallic and bimetallic Pt and Ni catalysts supported on nanofibrous γ-Al
2O
3 using two distinct methodologies, reverse microemulsion (ME) and incipient wetness impregnation (IM), and these catalysts were evaluated in DRM. Characterization of the catalysts revealed that the addition of Pt and the ME synthesis favored the formation of NiO instead of the nickel aluminate phase, resulting in a facilitated reduction of NiO to Ni° during the pretreatment. The ME synthesis positively influenced the overall carbon formation, reducing its formation by 90% and 70% compared to the 4Ni/Al
2O
3 and 0.04Pt4Ni/Al
2O
3 catalysts, respectively. Stability tests at 700 °C showed that all catalysts synthesized by ME exhibited more stable results. Additionally, the addition of Pt to Ni catalysts had a beneficial effect, particularly for the catalyst prepared by ME. Thus, the activity and stability of the catalysts can be improved by adding Pt and choosing the catalyst preparation method.
Dai et al.
[134] encapsulated Ni-Pt catalysts supported on silicalite-1 in a hollow zeolite. Catalytic tests of DRM (800 °C, atmospheric pressure, GHSV = 72,000 mL gcat−1 h−1, and CH
4/CO
2 = 1) revealed that the encapsulated catalysts exhibited high stability and resistance to carbon deposition. The initial conversions of CO
2 and CH
4 were 78–83% and 75–80%, respectively. However, after only 1 h of time on stream, the monometallic Ni catalyst (1.5 wt.%) without encapsulation (1.5Ni/S-1) was deactivated completely, while the bimetallic catalyst (1.5 wt.% Ni and 0.5 wt.% Pt) without encapsulation (1.5Ni-0.5Pt/S-1) showed a continuous activity loss and was deactivated after 6 h of time on stream. With the encapsulation of these catalysts, it was possible to maintain high activity without any signs of deactivation throughout the evaluated period (6 h). Among the encapsulated catalysts (1.5Ni@Hol S-1 and 1.5Ni-0.5Pt@Hol S-1), the bimetallic catalyst exhibited higher conversions of CO
2 (83%), and CH
4 (77%). The authors performed thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) to determine the amount of carbon deposited on the catalysts after 6 h on the stream. The 1.5Ni-0.5Pt@Hol S-1 catalyst showed only a 1% mass loss, while the 1.5Ni-0.5Pt/S-1 catalyst exhibited a mass loss of 11.4%, a similar value to that exhibited by the 1.5Ni@Hol S-1 catalyst (10.3%). The significant catalytic deactivation observed for the 1.5Ni/S-1 catalyst can be attributed to the rapid carbon deposition on this catalyst since it exhibited a mass loss of 31%.
The beneficial effect of adding Pt to Ni-based catalysts supported on Al
2O
3 for DRM could be observed in the works of the García–Diéguez group
[135][136]. These studies have shown that adding Pt to Ni catalysts reduces the size of the metallic crystals compared to monometallic Pt and Ni catalysts. An increase in catalytic activity can be achieved not only by introducing a small amount of Pt (0.4 wt.%) into Ni catalysts (10 wt.%) but also by adding a higher amount of Ni (10 wt.%) to Pt (4 wt.%) catalysts. These findings indicate the existence of a synergistic effect between Pt and Ni. Furthermore, adding small amounts of Pt significantly increases the stability of Ni-based catalysts, as Pt inhibits coke deposition and reduces the operating temperature. The loss of CO
2 conversion was reduced from 1.4% h
−1 to 0.4% h
−1 with the addition of 0.4 wt.% of Pt to the Ni catalyst (10 wt.%) supported on Al
2O
3 in stability tests (14 h) of DRM at 700 °C.
In addition to the sintering of metallic particles, operating DRM at high temperatures leads to the segregation of the Pt-Ni alloy. In the study conducted by Egelske et al.
[137], Pt and Ni catalysts supported on γ-Al
2O
3 were prepared and evaluated in DRM at different temperatures. The results revealed that DRM at 700 °C promotes the segregation of Pt-Ni alloy particles; consequently, the Pt-rich ensembles induce methane activation in coke, leading to catalyst deactivation. The authors presented evidence that the observed loss of catalytic activity was associated with increased coke formation. Although sintering processes occurred, they did not play a significant role in the activity loss.
In addition to Pt-Ni alloys, Ni alloys with other noble metals, such as Rh, Pd, and Ru, have been evaluated in DRM. Hou et al.
[17] evaluated different metals (Ru, Rh, Pt, Pd, Ir, Ni, and Co) in DRM, and among the noble metals, Rh showed the best results in terms of resistance to carbon deposition and higher catalytic activity. Thus, Rh was selected to be added to Ni at different molar ratios. The reactions, carried out at 800 °C with CH
4/CO
2 = 1, 60,000 mL gcat−1 h−1 and atmospheric pressure, revealed that the reforming activity of the bimetallic catalysts (Rh-Ni) increased with an increase in the Rh loading, while the coke formation rate decreased. Although the catalytic tests lasted only 4 h, the reactions performed with catalysts having Rh/Ni molar ratios greater than 0.1 did not display coke formation. Even increasing the space velocity to 150,000 mL g−1 h−1, no coke deposition was detected in the catalytic test with the catalyst composed of the molar ratio Rh/Ni = 0.1.
Due to DRM being an endothermic reaction and the carbon being easily formed at low temperatures, it is more appropriate to carry out DRM at temperatures above 800 °C. However, the operation at low temperatures could save resources and costs and limit the sintering processes at active sites
[138]. Thus, searching for a catalyst that exhibits resistance to coke deposition during DRM operation at lower temperatures is necessary. With this intention, Mao et al.
[139] synthesized monometallic catalysts of Rh (2.2 wt.%) and Ni (2.2 wt.%) and bimetallic catalysts of Rh (0.6 wt.%)-Ni (1.6 wt.%) supported on MgAl
2O
4, and evaluated them in biogas DR. The reaction conditions were 400–800 °C, CH
4/CO
2 = 1, WHSV = 18,000 mL gcat−1 h−1, and atmospheric pressure. The catalytic evaluations conducted at 600 °C showed initial conversions of CH
4 and CO
2 of around 42% and 53%, respectively, for all catalysts. During the stability test, the Ni-MgAl
2O
4 catalyst showed a continuous loss of catalytic activity. On the other hand, the Rh-MgAl
2O
4 and RhNi-MgAl
2O
4 catalysts showed no apparent deactivation during the 20 h of evaluation. By evaluating the carbon deposition on the spent catalysts, a mass loss of 21% was obtained for the Ni-MgAl
2O
4 catalyst and only 1.5% for Rh-MgAl
2O
4, while the bimetallic catalyst showed no mass loss. Thus, the authors suggest that the presence of Rh significantly increases the performance of the catalysts in terms of resistance to carbon deposition during DRM.
Jóźwiak et al.
[140] reported similar results, where a series of monometallic (Rh and Ni) and bimetallic (Rh-Ni) catalysts with a metallic content of 5 wt.% supported on SiO
2 were synthesized and evaluated in DRM. After 24 h on stream at 700 °C, the catalysts were evaluated concerning activity loss and carbon deposition. The Ni monometallic catalyst exhibited the highest activity loss (7.31%) among all catalysts, while the Rh monometallic catalyst presented an activity loss of 2.86%. The TGA of the spent Ni monometallic catalyst showed a mass loss of 21.6%, while there was no mass loss for the spent Rh monometallic catalyst. The bimetallic catalysts showed distinct performances depending on the Rh and Ni content. The activity loss was reduced with an increase in the Rh content in the catalysts, so that the 3.75Ni-1.25Rh, 2.5Ni-2.5Rh, and 1.25Ni-3.75Rh catalysts presented activity losses of 5.96%, 1.58%, and 1.12%, respectively. In contrast, carbon deposition did not follow the same trend, obtaining mass losses of 34.2%, 42.1%, and 1%, respectively. This considerable amount of carbon deposition on the catalyst surface was associated with the Ni-rich metallic phase. Furthermore, the authors suggested that although high carbon deposition occurred on the 2.5Ni-2.5Rh catalyst, the low activity loss (1.58%) observed is due to the type of carbon deposited, which has graphite-like structures.
Romano et al.
[141] synthesized several mono and bimetallic catalysts based on Ni, Rh, and Pd supported on γ-Al
2O
3 and CeO
2-Al
2O
3. DRM catalytic tests performed at 700 °C, CH
4/CO
2 = 1, and WHSV = 30,000 mL gcat−1 h−1 revealed that the Ni monometallic catalysts suffered deactivation by coke deposition. In contrast, the Rh monometallic catalysts showed remarkable activity and stability, with no evidence of deactivation during the evaluated period (96 h). Adding Rh to Ni monometallic catalysts enhanced the reducibility of nickel oxide species and increased the catalytic activity. The CH
4 and CO
2 conversions obtained by the 15%Ni/CeO
2-Al
2O
3 catalyst in 48 h of reaction were 57.7% and 72.4%, respectively. With the addition of 1% Rh (14%Ni1%Rh/CeO
2-Al
2O
3), the conversions obtained were increased to 68.3% (CH
4) and 81.4% (CO
2). On the other hand, Pd-based catalysts showed low catalytic performance. The Pd/CeO
2-Al
2O
3 monometallic catalysts lost their catalytic activity due to coke deposition, and the bimetallic catalyst (14.5%Ni0.5%Pd/CeO
2-Al
2O
3) presented conversions similar to the catalytic test performed with 15%Ni/Al
2O
3 catalyst, where conversions of 51.6% and 63.8% were obtained for CH
4 and CO
2, respectively, after 48 h.
Other researchers have investigated the addition of Pd to Ni-based catalysts with promising results. The metals Pd and Ni do not form alloys, mainly because Pd has a lower surface tension and a larger atomic radius than Ni
[142]. Ma et al.
[143] evaluated the addition of Pd to Ni catalysts supported on ordered mesoporous alumina (MA). The Pd/MA catalyst showed the lowest initial conversion of CH
4 and CO
2, around 75% and 82%, respectively. After 8 h of catalytic evaluation, the Pd/MA catalyst presented a significant loss of catalytic activity. The other catalysts maintained high CH
4 and CO
2 conversion values during the 100 h evaluation. While the Ni/MA catalyst showed a slight activity loss, the PdNi/MA bimetallic catalyst remained completely stable during the evaluation period. The carbon deposition on the spent catalysts was analyzed using TGA, TEM, and Raman techniques. It was observed that the bimetallic catalyst had the lowest coke deposition, and the addition of Pd prevented the formation of filamentous carbon, which was associated with a loss of catalyst activity.