Enzymatic systems achieve the catalytic conversion of
methane at
room temperature under mild conditions. In this study, varying thermodynamic
and kinetic parameters, we show that the reforming of methane by water
(MWR, CH4 + H2O → CO + 3H2) and the water–gas shift reaction (WGS, CO + H2O → H2 + CO2), two essential processes
to integrate fossil fuels toward a H2 energy loop, can
be achieved on ZrO2/Cu(111) catalysts near room temperature.
Measurements of ambient-pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy
and mass spectrometry, combined with density functional calculations
and kinetic Monte Carlo simulations, were used to study the behavior
of the inverse oxide/metal catalysts. The superior performance is
associated with a unique zirconia–copper interface, where multifunctional
sites involving zirconium, oxygen, and copper work coordinatively
to dissociate methane and water at 300 K and move forward the MWR
and WGS processes