Chinese Journal of Catalysis ›› 2026, Vol. 87: 22-46.DOI: 10.1016/S1872-2067(26)65107-8
• Reviews • Previous Articles Next Articles
Yang Ding, Yizhen Lu, Tianrong Yu, Mingrui Zhang, Rui Zhao, Ruijie Yang, Qixin Li, Shiqun Wu*(
), Jinlong Zhang*(
)
Received:2025-11-17
Accepted:2026-02-04
Online:2026-08-18
Published:2026-06-24
About author:Shiqun Wu received his Ph.D. degree in 2021 from East China University of Science and Technology under the supervision of Prof. Jinlong Zhang, and subsequently continued his postdoctoral research at the same institution. In 2024, he was appointed as an associate professor at East China University of Science and Technology. His research interests focus on the design and modulation of atomically dispersed active sites in photocatalysts and photothermal catalysis, with applications in the conversion of methane and carbon dioxide. He has published more than 40 peer-reviewed papers. He was invited as a young member of the editorial board of Chin. J. Catal. Since 2025.Supported by:Yang Ding, Yizhen Lu, Tianrong Yu, Mingrui Zhang, Rui Zhao, Ruijie Yang, Qixin Li, Shiqun Wu, Jinlong Zhang. Dual pathways in photo-driven Fischer-Tropsch synthesis for high selective hydrocarbon production[J]. Chinese Journal of Catalysis, 2026, 87: 22-46.
Add to citation manager EndNote|Ris|BibTeX
URL: https://www.cjcatal.com/EN/10.1016/S1872-2067(26)65107-8
| Mechanism | Core process | Key characteristics |
|---|---|---|
| Pure photocatalysis | light-driven generation and direct utilization of electron-hole pairs for redox reactions | relies solely on photoexcitation negligible thermal contribution (near-ambient temperature) |
| Thermally assisted photocatalysis | photoexcitation as the primary driver, with mild external heating enhancing performance | photo-primary, thermal-auxiliary heating reduces reaction energy barriers & suppresses charge recombination |
| Photo-induced thermal catalysis | light energy elevates temperature to drive conventional thermal catalysis | thermochemical pathway dominates negligible direct contribution from photogenerated carriers optimized reaction pathway for selectivity control |
| Photothermal synergistic catalysis | simultaneous and synergistic coupling of photochemical (carrier generation) and thermochemical (heat) pathways | self-supplied heat via photothermal conversion (100-400 °C) supra-additive enhancement beyond the sum of individual effects synergy between thermal acceleration of charge transfer and carrier-induced lowering of activation energies |
Table 1 Summary of photo-driven catalytic reaction mechanisms.
| Mechanism | Core process | Key characteristics |
|---|---|---|
| Pure photocatalysis | light-driven generation and direct utilization of electron-hole pairs for redox reactions | relies solely on photoexcitation negligible thermal contribution (near-ambient temperature) |
| Thermally assisted photocatalysis | photoexcitation as the primary driver, with mild external heating enhancing performance | photo-primary, thermal-auxiliary heating reduces reaction energy barriers & suppresses charge recombination |
| Photo-induced thermal catalysis | light energy elevates temperature to drive conventional thermal catalysis | thermochemical pathway dominates negligible direct contribution from photogenerated carriers optimized reaction pathway for selectivity control |
| Photothermal synergistic catalysis | simultaneous and synergistic coupling of photochemical (carrier generation) and thermochemical (heat) pathways | self-supplied heat via photothermal conversion (100-400 °C) supra-additive enhancement beyond the sum of individual effects synergy between thermal acceleration of charge transfer and carrier-induced lowering of activation energies |
Fig. 2. (a-d) XPS profiles of different catalysts and operando X-ray adsorption experiments. (a) Ex-situ XPS spectra of Fe5C2 catalyst at different treated conditions. (b) O1s spectra of fresh and used Fe5C2 catalyst. (c) In-situ Fe K-edge XANES of Fe5C2 catalyst under different reaction times (under photoirradiation). (d) In-situ EXAFS of Fe5C2 catalyst under different reaction times (under photo-irradiation). (e) Energy profiles for two CH2 coupling and hydrogenation forming C2H6 on Fe5C2 (111) and Fe5C2 (111)-4Oads, as well as the corresponding intermediate structures. (f) Energy profiles for C2H4 adsorption and hydrogenation forming C2H6 under thermal-driven (ground-state) and photo-driven (excited-state) conditions on Fe5C2 (111)-4Oads and Fe5C2(111) surfaces, as well as the corresponding intermediate structures. (Fe, C, O and H atoms are blue, brown, red, and white, respectively; the C atom is colored black to distinguish it from CH2). Reproduced with permission from Ref. [82]. Copyright 2018, Elsevier. High-resolution XPS spectra of fresh Fe5C2/α-Al2O3 catalyst (g) and spent catalyst (h). 57Fe Mössbauer spectra of fresh Fe5C2/α-Al2O3 (i) and spent catalyst (j). Reproduced with permission from Ref. [83]. Copyright 2020, Springer Nature.
Fig. 3. (a-d) Characterization data for Co-450. (a,b) HRTEM images. (c) HAADF-STEM image. (d) EDX element maps for Co, Zn, Al, and O. The potential energy profile of CO dissociation on Co3O4 (220), Co (111)/Co3O4 (220), and Co (111) (e), CH2 coupling and C2H4 hydrogenation on Co (111)/Co3O4 (220) and Co (111) (f). Reproduced with permission from Ref. [84]. Copyright 2018, Wiley-VCH. (g) UV-vis spectra for Co-x and CoAl-LDH. The calculation models for Co3O4 (220) surface (h) and Co (111) surface (i), and the potential energy profile of CH4 formation (j) and C-C coupling (k) on Co3O4 (220) and Co (111). Reproduced with permission from Ref. [85]. Copyright 2019, Elsevier.
Fig. 4. XPS spectra for Co-C, Co-CN, Co-BCN catalyst: survey spectrum (a) and N 1s (b). (c) The measured work functions (Φ) via UPS analysis. (d) TPD profiles of CO over Co-C, Co-CN and Co-BCN. (e) Pulse CO reactions in a He flow over Co-BCN catalysts at 230 °C. The peaks of CO2 (m/z = 44) and CO (m/z = 28) are shown in the profiles. (f) Steady DRFITS spectra of syngas adsorption on Co-BCN catalysts at 230 °C. Reaction conditions: H2/CO/N2 = 60/20/20 in a total flow of 5 mL min?1 under dry conditions. Reproduced with permission from Ref. [88]. Copyright 2022, Elsevier. (g) High-resolution Fe 2p XPS spectra of Fe5C2 and Fe5C2/NCT samples. (h) Fe K-edge XANES spectra for catalysts. (i) CO-TPD profiles of Fe5C2 and Fe5C2/NC600 samples. (j) Pulse reactions of CO in a flow of He over the Fe5C2/NC600 catalyst at 250 °C. (k) Potential energy profile of H-assisted CO dissociation on Fe5C2 (510) and Fe5C2 (510)/different configurations of N (pyrrolic, pyridinic, and graphitic N). Reproduced with permission from Ref. [89]. Copyright 2022, American Chemical Society. (l) Ni K-edge XANES. (m) Ni K-edge EXAFS spectra for Ni-MMO and Ni-x catalysts. (n) Ni 2p XPS spectra for Ni-MMO and Ni-x catalysts. (o) Potential energy profiles for CH2 coupling and C2H4 hydrogenation on Ni/Al2O3 and Ni/MnO. Reproduced with permission from Ref. [90]. Copyright 2019, Wiley-VCH.
Fig. 5. Potential energy profiles for H-assisted CO hydrogenation to methane (a) and C-C coupling reactions (b) on Ni (111) and 4P/Ni (111). Reproduced with permission from Ref. [91]. Copyright 2021, Wiley‐VCH. (c) CO-TPD profiles for the Co-NP, Ru1Co-SAA and RunCo-NA catalysts. (d) Potential energy profile of CO* dissociation. (e) Potential energy profile of eight C-C coupling paths for C2* intermediates. (f) Energy barriers of different C-C coupling paths with transition state configurations. Color code: Ru (orange), Co (violet), C (grey), H (white). (g) Correlation analysis between the unsaturation of C2* intermediates relative to ethane (Ω) and the energy barrier reduction (ΔEa) of Ru1Co-SAA minus Co-NP. (h) Linear correlation between unsaturation of C2* intermediates relative to ethane (Ω) and energy barrier reduction (ΔEa) of Ru1Co-SAA minus Co-NP. Reproduced with permission from Ref. [60]. Copyright 2023, Springer Nature.
Fig. 6. (a) SEM image for LD-Co/PDVB on a silicon wafer substrate. Photographs of a water droplet on LD-Co (b) and LD-Co/PDVB (c) catalysts. (d) UV-vis diffuse reflectance spectra for ZnCoAl-LDH, LD-Co, PDVB and LD-Co/PDVB. (e) Temperature profiles for LD-Co/PDVB, LD-Co and PDVB under Xe lamp (UV-Vis) irradiation at 1.79 W cm-2. (f) Adsorption isotherms for water vapor at near reaction temperature (200 °C) on the LD-Co and LD-Co/PDVB catalysts. (g) Water vapor partial pressure pulse experiments at 30 °C on the LD-Co and LD-Co/PDVB catalysts. Reproduced with permission from Ref. [94]. Copyright 2023, Elsevier. (h) The contact angle of the obtained catalysts. In-situ FTIR of the Fe/Fe3C (i) and the Fe/Fe3C-c (j) catalysts, respectively. Reproduced with permission from ref. [95]. Copyright 2023, Wiley-VCH.
| Sample | Actual temperature (°C) | Conditions | Conversion rates (CO) | Selectivity of CO2 | Selectivity* (wt%) | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Co-450 | 195 | CO:H2:N2 = 20:60:20, 0.18 MPa, UV-vis, 300 W Xe lamp | 15.4% | 47.6% | CH4: 48%, C2-C4=: 36.0%, C2-C4o (o/p = 6.1), C5+: 10.1% | [ |
| O-decorated Fe5C2 | 490 | CO:H2:Ar = 25:50:25, atmospheric pressure, 300 W Xe lamp, 2.9 W cm-2 | 49.5% | 18.9% | CH4: 33.1%; C2-C4=: 55.5%, C2-C4o: 5.1% (o/p = 10.9), C5+: 6.3% | [ |
| Co-700 | 210 | CO:H2:N2 = 20:60:20, 0.18 MPa, UV-vis, 300 W Xe lamp | 35.4% | 3.1% | CH4: 35.0%, C2-C4: 36.3%, C5+: 28.7% | [ |
| Ni-500 (Ni:Mn = 2:1) | 210 | CO:H2:N2 = 20:60:20, 0.18 MPa, 300 W Xe lamp, 2.04 W cm-2 | 14.9% | 0.2% | CH4: 30.%, C2-C4=: 33.0%, C2-C4o: 32.1% (o/p = 1.0), C5+: 4.1% | [ |
| Fe5C2/α-Al2O3 | 340 | CO:H2:N2 = 20:60:20, 0.18 MPa, UV-vis, 300 W Xe lamp, 6.7 W cm-2 | 52.5% | not reported (NR) | CH4: 15.2%, C2-C4=: 50.3% (o/p = ~60) | [ |
| Co1Mnx/(MnO)2‒x | 250 | CO:H2:N2=20:20:60, 0.18 MPa, 300 W Xe lamp | 13.9% | 22.6% | CH4: 28.4%, C2-C4=: 27.0% (o/p = 3.2) | [ |
| TiO2-Ni-P-3 | 115 | CO:H2:N2 = 20:60:20, 0.18 MPa, 300 W Xe lamp, 1.82 W cm-2 | 20.70% | 0.65% | CH4: 28.65%; C2-C4: 41.67%, C5+: 29.03% | [ |
| α-C30A30 | NR | CO:H2 = 1:3, 55.5 kPa, 300 W Xe lamp | 28.8% | NR | CH4: 24.8%, C2-C4=: 71.9% (o/p = 16.7) | [ |
| Fe5C2/NC600 | 250 | CO:H2:N2 = 20:40:40, 0.18 MPa, 300 W Xe lamp, 2.96 W cm-2 | 22.3% (±0.5) | 16.7% (±1.3) | CH4: 22.3% (±1.1); C2-C4=: 55.3% (±0.4); C2-C4o: 5.9% (±0.1) (o/p = 9.4); C5+: 16.2% (±1.6) | [ |
| Co-BCN | 230 | CO:H2:N2 = 20:60:20, 0.18 MPa, UV-vis, 300 W Xe lamp, 2.8 W cm-2 | 44.0% | 3.1% | hydrocarbons: 96.9% | [ |
| LD-Co/PDVB | 195 | CO:H2:N2 = 20:40:40, 0.2 MPa, 300 W Xe lamp, 1.79 W cm-2 | 14.43% | 5.17% | CH4: 33.48%; C2-C6=: 42.72%, C2-C6o: 18.63% (o/p = 2.3) | [ |
| Ru1Co-SAA | 200 | CO:H2:N2 = 20:40:40, 0.5 MPa, 300 W Xe lamp, 1.80 W cm-2 | 58.6% | 0.35% | CH4: 11.2%, C2-C4: 12.6%, C5+: 75.8% | [ |
| CoFe-BCN | 264 | CO:H2:N2 = 20:60:20, 0.18 MPa, 300 W Xe lamp, 2.40 W cm-2 | 18.4% | 10.5% | CH4: 28.3%, C2-C4: 57.7%, C5+: 14.0% | [ |
| Fe/Fe3C-c | 340 | CO:H2:N2 = 20:60:20, 0.18 MPa, 300 W Xe lamp | 22.6% | 6.5% | CH4: 21.4%, C2-C4=: 48.0%, C2-C4o: 4.8% (o/p = 10.1), C5+: 19.4% | [ |
| Fe5C2-350 | 340 | CO:H2:N2 = 20:60:20, 0.18 MPa, 300 W Xe lamp | 24.3% | 5.1% | CH4: 28.7%, C2-C4=: 54.2%, C2-C4o: 3.2% (o/p = 16.9), C5+: 13.9% | [ |
| Ni-r-TiO2 | 180 | CO:H2:N2 = 20:40:40, 0.18 MPa, 300 W Xe lamp (200-1100 nm), 1.84 W cm-2 | 23.3% | 2.3% | CH4: 24.7%, C2+: 73% | [ |
Table 2 Representative work on photo-induced thermal catalysis mechanistic reactions.
| Sample | Actual temperature (°C) | Conditions | Conversion rates (CO) | Selectivity of CO2 | Selectivity* (wt%) | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Co-450 | 195 | CO:H2:N2 = 20:60:20, 0.18 MPa, UV-vis, 300 W Xe lamp | 15.4% | 47.6% | CH4: 48%, C2-C4=: 36.0%, C2-C4o (o/p = 6.1), C5+: 10.1% | [ |
| O-decorated Fe5C2 | 490 | CO:H2:Ar = 25:50:25, atmospheric pressure, 300 W Xe lamp, 2.9 W cm-2 | 49.5% | 18.9% | CH4: 33.1%; C2-C4=: 55.5%, C2-C4o: 5.1% (o/p = 10.9), C5+: 6.3% | [ |
| Co-700 | 210 | CO:H2:N2 = 20:60:20, 0.18 MPa, UV-vis, 300 W Xe lamp | 35.4% | 3.1% | CH4: 35.0%, C2-C4: 36.3%, C5+: 28.7% | [ |
| Ni-500 (Ni:Mn = 2:1) | 210 | CO:H2:N2 = 20:60:20, 0.18 MPa, 300 W Xe lamp, 2.04 W cm-2 | 14.9% | 0.2% | CH4: 30.%, C2-C4=: 33.0%, C2-C4o: 32.1% (o/p = 1.0), C5+: 4.1% | [ |
| Fe5C2/α-Al2O3 | 340 | CO:H2:N2 = 20:60:20, 0.18 MPa, UV-vis, 300 W Xe lamp, 6.7 W cm-2 | 52.5% | not reported (NR) | CH4: 15.2%, C2-C4=: 50.3% (o/p = ~60) | [ |
| Co1Mnx/(MnO)2‒x | 250 | CO:H2:N2=20:20:60, 0.18 MPa, 300 W Xe lamp | 13.9% | 22.6% | CH4: 28.4%, C2-C4=: 27.0% (o/p = 3.2) | [ |
| TiO2-Ni-P-3 | 115 | CO:H2:N2 = 20:60:20, 0.18 MPa, 300 W Xe lamp, 1.82 W cm-2 | 20.70% | 0.65% | CH4: 28.65%; C2-C4: 41.67%, C5+: 29.03% | [ |
| α-C30A30 | NR | CO:H2 = 1:3, 55.5 kPa, 300 W Xe lamp | 28.8% | NR | CH4: 24.8%, C2-C4=: 71.9% (o/p = 16.7) | [ |
| Fe5C2/NC600 | 250 | CO:H2:N2 = 20:40:40, 0.18 MPa, 300 W Xe lamp, 2.96 W cm-2 | 22.3% (±0.5) | 16.7% (±1.3) | CH4: 22.3% (±1.1); C2-C4=: 55.3% (±0.4); C2-C4o: 5.9% (±0.1) (o/p = 9.4); C5+: 16.2% (±1.6) | [ |
| Co-BCN | 230 | CO:H2:N2 = 20:60:20, 0.18 MPa, UV-vis, 300 W Xe lamp, 2.8 W cm-2 | 44.0% | 3.1% | hydrocarbons: 96.9% | [ |
| LD-Co/PDVB | 195 | CO:H2:N2 = 20:40:40, 0.2 MPa, 300 W Xe lamp, 1.79 W cm-2 | 14.43% | 5.17% | CH4: 33.48%; C2-C6=: 42.72%, C2-C6o: 18.63% (o/p = 2.3) | [ |
| Ru1Co-SAA | 200 | CO:H2:N2 = 20:40:40, 0.5 MPa, 300 W Xe lamp, 1.80 W cm-2 | 58.6% | 0.35% | CH4: 11.2%, C2-C4: 12.6%, C5+: 75.8% | [ |
| CoFe-BCN | 264 | CO:H2:N2 = 20:60:20, 0.18 MPa, 300 W Xe lamp, 2.40 W cm-2 | 18.4% | 10.5% | CH4: 28.3%, C2-C4: 57.7%, C5+: 14.0% | [ |
| Fe/Fe3C-c | 340 | CO:H2:N2 = 20:60:20, 0.18 MPa, 300 W Xe lamp | 22.6% | 6.5% | CH4: 21.4%, C2-C4=: 48.0%, C2-C4o: 4.8% (o/p = 10.1), C5+: 19.4% | [ |
| Fe5C2-350 | 340 | CO:H2:N2 = 20:60:20, 0.18 MPa, 300 W Xe lamp | 24.3% | 5.1% | CH4: 28.7%, C2-C4=: 54.2%, C2-C4o: 3.2% (o/p = 16.9), C5+: 13.9% | [ |
| Ni-r-TiO2 | 180 | CO:H2:N2 = 20:40:40, 0.18 MPa, 300 W Xe lamp (200-1100 nm), 1.84 W cm-2 | 23.3% | 2.3% | CH4: 24.7%, C2+: 73% | [ |
Fig. 7. (a,b) TEM images of Ru/graphene. The inset in (b) is a HRTEM image of worm-like Ru nanostructures. (c) UV-vis absorption spectra of Ru/graphene and graphene. (d) Arrhenius plots of light-induced FTS reaction and dark reaction. Reproduced with permission from Ref. [104]. Copyright 2015, American Chemical Society. (e) Flow reaction test of 2Co/STO with the different working temperatures under UV light off and on at atmospheric pressure. (f) The solar-driven FTS reaction for C1-C4 production over the 2Co/STO catalyst with and without sacrificial agents (FeCl3 and Na2SO3 were used for quenching the photogenerated electrons and holes, respectively; loading amount, 5 wt%). (g) In-situ DRIFTS spectra of the adsorbed surface species during time evolution under CO and H2 gas with cooperative UV light- and thermal-driven (100 °C) catalysis. (h) By contrast, in-situ DRIFTS spectra of 2Co/SiO2 under the same test conditions. (i) The photocarrier-assisted photothermocatalysis of FTS over the Co/STO catalyst. (j) The main surface intermediates of the reaction pathway. Reproduced with permission from ref. [105]. Copyright 2021, Royal Society of Chemistry.
Fig. 8. ESR spectra of the DMPO-O2•− (a) and DMPO-OH (b) adducts over CoMnC-450 under light irradiation. High-resolution SI-XPS spectra of Co 2p (c) and Mn 2p (d) on CoMnC-450 samples tested in darkness and under illumination. (e,f) In-situ FTIR study of adsorbed CO on the CoMnC-450 catalysts in darkness (i) and under illumination (j). (After exposure to CO for 30 min, then purging by N2 for 10 min). (g) Potential energy profiles for CO hydrogenation under ground states and excited states (thermal- and Photo-Driven catalysis) on Co (111)/MnO (200). Co, Mn, C, O, and H atoms are shown in yellow, cyan, red, gray, and bluish-violet, respectively. Reproduced with permission from Ref. [45]. Copyright 2023, Wiley‐VCH. (h) UV-vis diffuse reflectance absorption spectra. (i) Forbidden bandwidth data. (j) Photocurrent density data under visible light condition. Reproduced with permission from Ref. [109]. Copyright 2024, Wiley‐VCH.
Fig. 9. (a) Co 2p XPS spectra of Co/graphitic carbon material. (b) CO-TPD profiles of Co/T and Co/T-PW catalysts. (c) Photocurrent /T-PW. (d) NH3-TPD results of TaON and TaON-PW. Reproduced with permission from Ref. [113]. Copyright 2023, Royal Society of Chemistry. In situ H2-chemisorption on Cu/CeO2 in the dark (e) or under light irradiation (f), and Co/CeO2 in the dark (g) or under light irradiation (h), at 180 °C. In-situ DRIFTS spectra of CO absorption under dark conditions (i,k) and under irradiation conditions (j,l) at 180 °C over Co/CeO2 or Co-Cu/CeO2. High-resolution XPS of Ce 3d of Co/CeO2 (m) and Co-Cu/CeO2 (n) samples. (o) Diagram of photo-thermal coordination enhancing catalytic activity. Co can produce alcohols via FTS. The electrons of CeO2 transferred to the surface of Co under illumination promoting the adsorption of CO. The LSPR effect of Cu caused by light accelerates the dissociation of hydrogen. The two effects synergistically promote the reaction rate. Reproduced with permission from Ref. [114]. Copyright 2022, Royal Society of Chemistry.
Fig. 10. (a) In-situ XPS spectra of NiAl-MMO and the samples reduced at different temperatures (Ni-x). (b) EXAFS of NiAl-MMO and Ni-x. (c) Catalyst-bed temperature as a function of light irradiation time. The potential-energy profile of the most possible reaction paths for syngas conversion on Ni (111) and 4O/Ni (111): CH4 formation (d) and C-C coupling (e). Reproduced with permission from Ref. [117]. Copyright 2016, Wiley-VCH.
| Sample | Actual temperature (°C) | Conditions | Conversion rates (CO) | Selectivity of CO2 | Selectivity* (wt%) | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ru/graphene | 150 | CO:H2 = 1:2, 3.0 MPa, visible light, 300 W Xe lamp, 0.5 W cm-2 | 43% | < 1 mol% | CH4: 2.6%, C2-C4: 15.7% (56.4% olefins), C5+: 81.7% | [ |
| Fe(20%)- mTiO2 | 220 | CO:H2 = 1:2, atmospheric pressure | 75%-85% | not reported (NR) | see | [ |
| Ni-525 | 150 | CO:H2:Ar = 20:60:20, 0.08 MPa, 300 W Xe lamp | 27.7% | 2.7% | CH4: 38.8%, C2-C4: 37.4%, C5-7: 21.1% | [ |
| 20% Co/TNT | 220 | CO:H2:Ar = 20:10:1, 2.0 MPa, 500 W Hg lamp | 63.9% | 17.3% | CH4: 34.6%, C2-C4: 22.7% (p/o = 98.6:1.4, C5+: 42.7% | [ |
| Fe-500 | 230 | CO:H2:N2 = 20:60:20, 0.18 MPa, 300 W Xe lamp | 20.9% | 11.4% | CH4: 28.6%, C2-C4=: 42.4%, C2-C4o: 9.0% (o/p = 4.7), C5+: 8.6% | [ |
| 2Co/STO | 230 | CO:H2 = 1:2, 55 kPa, 300 W Xe lamp, 0.6 W cm-2 | 14% | 47.6% | CH4: 15.2%, C2-C4=: 28.1%, C2-C4o: 9.1% (o/p = 3.1) | [ |
| Co-Cu/CeO2 | 180 | CO:H2:He = 5:10:85, 3.0 MPa, 300 W Xe lamp | NR | NR | methane: 3.79%, methanol: 61.62%, ethanol: 25.78%, Propanol: 8.81% | [ |
| Fe-Co(5:1)/TiC | 350 | CO:H2:Ar = 24:72:4, 0.5 MPa, 350-2500 nm irradiation | 30% | NR | C2-C3: 32%, C4+: 27% | [ |
| Co/T-PW | 220 | CO:H2:Ar = 32.2:64.6:3.2, 2.0 MPa, 500 W Xe lamp | 31% | NR | CH4: 4%, C2-C4: 3%, C5+: 93% | [ |
| CoMnC-450 | 210 | CO:H2:N2 = 20:20:60, 0.18 MPa, 300 W Xe lamp | 12.6% | 18.2% | CH4: 22.4%, C2-C4=: 36.5%, C2-C4o: 7.0% (o/p = 4.7), C5+: 34.1% | [ |
| Co-TZ | 220 | CO:H2 = 1:2, 2.0 MPa, 500 W Xe lamp, 0.2 W cm-2 | 63.7% | NR | CH4: 8.5%; C2-C4: 2.5%, C5+: 89.0% | [ |
Table 3 Representative work on photothermal synergistic catalysis mechanistic reactions.
| Sample | Actual temperature (°C) | Conditions | Conversion rates (CO) | Selectivity of CO2 | Selectivity* (wt%) | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ru/graphene | 150 | CO:H2 = 1:2, 3.0 MPa, visible light, 300 W Xe lamp, 0.5 W cm-2 | 43% | < 1 mol% | CH4: 2.6%, C2-C4: 15.7% (56.4% olefins), C5+: 81.7% | [ |
| Fe(20%)- mTiO2 | 220 | CO:H2 = 1:2, atmospheric pressure | 75%-85% | not reported (NR) | see | [ |
| Ni-525 | 150 | CO:H2:Ar = 20:60:20, 0.08 MPa, 300 W Xe lamp | 27.7% | 2.7% | CH4: 38.8%, C2-C4: 37.4%, C5-7: 21.1% | [ |
| 20% Co/TNT | 220 | CO:H2:Ar = 20:10:1, 2.0 MPa, 500 W Hg lamp | 63.9% | 17.3% | CH4: 34.6%, C2-C4: 22.7% (p/o = 98.6:1.4, C5+: 42.7% | [ |
| Fe-500 | 230 | CO:H2:N2 = 20:60:20, 0.18 MPa, 300 W Xe lamp | 20.9% | 11.4% | CH4: 28.6%, C2-C4=: 42.4%, C2-C4o: 9.0% (o/p = 4.7), C5+: 8.6% | [ |
| 2Co/STO | 230 | CO:H2 = 1:2, 55 kPa, 300 W Xe lamp, 0.6 W cm-2 | 14% | 47.6% | CH4: 15.2%, C2-C4=: 28.1%, C2-C4o: 9.1% (o/p = 3.1) | [ |
| Co-Cu/CeO2 | 180 | CO:H2:He = 5:10:85, 3.0 MPa, 300 W Xe lamp | NR | NR | methane: 3.79%, methanol: 61.62%, ethanol: 25.78%, Propanol: 8.81% | [ |
| Fe-Co(5:1)/TiC | 350 | CO:H2:Ar = 24:72:4, 0.5 MPa, 350-2500 nm irradiation | 30% | NR | C2-C3: 32%, C4+: 27% | [ |
| Co/T-PW | 220 | CO:H2:Ar = 32.2:64.6:3.2, 2.0 MPa, 500 W Xe lamp | 31% | NR | CH4: 4%, C2-C4: 3%, C5+: 93% | [ |
| CoMnC-450 | 210 | CO:H2:N2 = 20:20:60, 0.18 MPa, 300 W Xe lamp | 12.6% | 18.2% | CH4: 22.4%, C2-C4=: 36.5%, C2-C4o: 7.0% (o/p = 4.7), C5+: 34.1% | [ |
| Co-TZ | 220 | CO:H2 = 1:2, 2.0 MPa, 500 W Xe lamp, 0.2 W cm-2 | 63.7% | NR | CH4: 8.5%; C2-C4: 2.5%, C5+: 89.0% | [ |
|
| [1] | Heng Zhou, Longfei Hong, Yan Zhang, Yuyue Zhou, Sheng Chu, Huiyan Zhang, Hui Li, Tianyi Ma, Heng Zhang. Efficient solar-simulated-driven valorization of non-edible oils for biodiesel production via interfacial localized photothermal catalysis [J]. Chinese Journal of Catalysis, 2026, 87(8): 156-169. |
| [2] | Sen Wang, Shiying Li, Rui Geng, Bo Zhou, Pengfei Wang, Zhangfeng Qin, Mei Dong, Jianguo Wang, Unni Olsbye, Weibin Fan. The smallest Ni species triggering selective hydrogenation of CO2 to methane: Ni dimer embedded in MFI and enhancement of MnOx [J]. Chinese Journal of Catalysis, 2026, 87(8): 113-125. |
| [3] | Shahla Karimi, Mehran Rezaei, Jiguang Deng, Hongxing Dai, Ali Rastegarpanah. Recent advances in noble metal-based catalysts for methane decomposition: Performance, mechanism, and optimization [J]. Chinese Journal of Catalysis, 2026, 86(7): 9-48. |
| [4] | Jiaying Liu, Yu Fang. Unraveling structure-activity relationships in 2-D covalent organic frameworks for photocatalysis: From molecular engineering to high-performance optimization [J]. Chinese Journal of Catalysis, 2026, 85(6): 47-87. |
| [5] | Jingyao Wu, Yujing Lv, Qiang Zhao, Shuo Wang, Ying Wang, Na Wen, Zhengxin Ding, Zizhong Zhang, Jinlin Long. Electron-proton duet in covalent organic frameworks for efficient direct oxygen reduction to hydrogen peroxide [J]. Chinese Journal of Catalysis, 2026, 84(5): 288-300. |
| [6] | Zhiyao Liu, Tangkang Liu, Chuan Qin, Guoliang Liu, Anmin Zheng. Zirconia-mediated interfacial catalysis for CO2 hydrogenation [J]. Chinese Journal of Catalysis, 2026, 84(5): 1-24. |
| [7] | Shican Jiang, Mingyu Yi, Zuozheng Liu, Abhishek Dutta Chowdhury. Linking catalyst synthesis strategies to CO2-modified Fischer-Tropsch performance in iron-carbon systems [J]. Chinese Journal of Catalysis, 2026, 84(5): 236-249. |
| [8] | Yu Gu, Shujia Zhang, Minglu Xu, Hao Yan, Minghao Zhou, Lei Wang, Hui Shi. Dehydroaromatization of methane and methane co-aromatization process with propane: Reaction mechanism, catalyst design, carbon deposition and process optimization [J]. Chinese Journal of Catalysis, 2026, 84(5): 25-60. |
| [9] | Haifeng Fan, Di Xu, Ting Zeng, Guoqiang Hou, Yangyang Li, Siyi Huang, Yanfei Xu, Zheng Wang, Xinhua Gao, Xiang-Kui Gu, Mingyue Ding. Highly efficient electron-enriched Y2O3‒x-Ni interfaces boosting low-temperature CO2 methanation [J]. Chinese Journal of Catalysis, 2026, 84(5): 200-213. |
| [10] | Changjun You, Yuqi Ren, Hongbin He, Ruoxuan Peng, Yuan-Hao Zhu, Miao Cheng, Peigen Ding, Liuna Zhang, Shengnan Lan, Hongyang Zhang, Yiqin Zhang, Fengfan Zhu, Jing Li, Jiancheng Zhou. Dual-site atomic engineering of Ru Single-atoms and Ni clusters on CeO2 nanorods for solar-driven CO2 methanation [J]. Chinese Journal of Catalysis, 2026, 83(4): 183-197. |
| [11] | Mang Zheng, Qi Li, Qianxi Liu, Huiquan Gu, Mingyang Liu, Qi Liu, Baojiang Jiang. Asymmetric oxygen-bridged Bi-In dual sites for efficient photothermal CO2 methanation [J]. Chinese Journal of Catalysis, 2026, 83(4): 351-362. |
| [12] | Fan Dang, Chunli Ai, Chi Ma, Zeyu Jiang, Jicheng Liu, Mingjiao Tian, Mingzhuo Zhang, Chi He. Advances in metal oxide catalysts for efficient VOCs oxidation: Synthesis strategy and catalytic mechanism [J]. Chinese Journal of Catalysis, 2026, 81(2): 97-123. |
| [13] | Ai Yating, A. C. Carabineiro Sónia, Xiong Xianqiang, Zhu Huayue, Wang Qi, Weng Bo, Yang Min-Quan. Systematic assessment of emerging contaminants elimination using an S-scheme Mn0.5Cd0.5S/In2S3 photocatalyst: Degradation pathways, toxicity evaluation and mechanistic analysis [J]. Chinese Journal of Catalysis, 2025, 75(8): 147-163. |
| [14] | Xueqing Zhang, Wusha Jiye, Yuhua Zhang, Jinlin Li, Li Wang. Advances in iron-based Fischer-Tropsch synthesis with high carbon efficiency [J]. Chinese Journal of Catalysis, 2025, 74(7): 4-21. |
| [15] | Jian-Feng Wu, Li-Ye Liang, Zheng Che, Yu-Ting Miao, Lingjun Chou. Bimetallic oxide catalysts for CO2 hydrogenation to methanol: Recent advances and challenges [J]. Chinese Journal of Catalysis, 2025, 73(6): 62-78. |
| Viewed | ||||||
|
Full text |
|
|||||
|
Abstract |
|
|||||