Nickel Oxide Reduction by Hydrogen: Kinetics and Structural
Transformations
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Abstract
We
studied the reduction kinetics of bulk NiO crystals by hydrogen
and the corresponding structural transformations in the temperature
range of 543–1593 K. A new experimental approach allows us
to arrest and quench the reaction at different stages with millisecond
time resolution. Two distinctive temperature intervals are found where
the reaction kinetics and product microstructures are different. At
relatively low temperatures, 543–773 K, the kinetic curves
have a sigmoidal shape with long induction times (up to 2000 s) and
result in incomplete conversion. Low-temperature reduction forms a
complex polycrystalline Ni/NiO porous structure with characteristic
pore size on the order of 100 nm. No induction period was observed
for the high-temperature conditions (1173–1593 K), and full
reduction of NiO to Ni is achieved within seconds. An extremely fine
porous metal structure, with pore size under 10 nm, forms during high-temperature
reduction by a novel crystal growth mechanism. This consists of the
epitaxial-like transformation of micrometer-sized NiO single crystals
into single-crystalline Ni without any crystallographic changes, including
shape, size, or crystal orientation. The Avrami nucleation model accurately
describes the reaction kinetics in both temperature regimes. However,
the structural transformations during reduction in both nanolevel
and atomic level are very complex, and the mechanism relies on both
nucleation and the critical diffusion length for outward diffusion
of water molecules