Bimbela Serrano, Fernando
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Bimbela Serrano
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Fernando
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InaMat2. Instituto de Investigación en Materiales Avanzados y Matemáticas
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Publication Open Access Extraction of phenolic compounds from populus salicaceae bark(MDPI, 2022) Autor, Elsa; Cornejo Ibergallartu, Alfonso; Bimbela Serrano, Fernando; Maisterra Udi, Maitane; Gandía Pascual, Luis; Martínez Merino, Víctor; Zientziak; Institute for Advanced Materials and Mathematics - INAMAT2; Ciencias; Gobierno de Navarra / Nafarroako Gobernua; Universidad Pública de Navarra / Nafarroako UnibertsitateLignocellulosic residues have the potential for obtaining high value-added products that could be better valorized if biorefinery strategies are adopted. The debarking of short-rotation crops yields important amounts of residues that are currently underexploited as low-grade fuel and could be a renewable source of phenolic compounds and other important phytochemicals. The isolation of these compounds can be carried out by different methods, but for attaining an integral valorization of barks, a preliminary extraction step for phytochemicals should be included. Using optimized extraction methods based on Soxhlet extraction can be effective for the isolation of phenolic compounds with antioxidant properties. In this study, poplar bark (Populus Salicaceae) was used to obtain a series of extracts using five different solvents in a sequential extraction of 24 h each in a Soxhlet extractor. Selected solvents were put in contact with the bark sample raffinate following an increasing order of polarity: n-hexane, dichloromethane, ethyl acetate, methanol, and water. The oily residues of the extracts obtained after each extraction were further subjected to flash chromatography, and the fractions obtained were characterized by gas chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry (GC–MS). The total phenolic content (TPC) was determined using the Folin–Ciocalteu method, and the antioxidant activity (AOA) of the samples was evaluated in their reaction with the free radical 2,2-Diphenyl-picrylhydrazyl (DPPH method). Polar solvents allowed for higher individual extraction yields, with overall extraction yields at around 23% (dry, ash-free basis). Different compounds were identified, including hydrolyzable tannins, phenolic monomers such as catechol and vanillin, pentoses and hexoses, and other organic compounds such as long-chain alkanes, alcohols, and carboxylic acids, among others. An excellent correlation was found between TPC and antioxidant activity for the samples analyzed. The fractions obtained using methanol showed the highest phenolic content (608 g of gallic acid equivalent (GAE)/mg) and the greatest antioxidant activity.Publication Open Access CO2 methanation over nickel catalysts: support effects investigated through specific activity and operando IR spectroscopy measurement(MDPI, 2023) González Rangulan, Vigni Virginia; Reyero Zaragoza, Inés; Bimbela Serrano, Fernando; Romero Sarria, Francisca; Daturi, Marco:; Gandía Pascual, Luis; Ciencias; Zientziak; Institute for Advanced Materials and Mathematics - INAMAT2; Universidad Pública de Navarra / Nafarroako Unibertsitate PublikoaRenewed interest in CO2 methanation is due to its role within the framework of the Power-to-Methane processes. While the use of nickel-based catalysts for CO2 methanation is well stablished, the support is being subjected to thorough research due to its complex effects. The objective of this work was the study of the influence of the support with a series of catalysts supported on alumina, ceria, ceria–zirconia, and titania. Catalysts’ performance has been kinetically and spectroscopically evaluated over a wide range of temperatures (150–500 °C). The main results have shown remarkable differences among the catalysts as concerns Ni dispersion, metallic precursor reducibility, basic properties, and catalytic activity. Operando infrared spectroscopy measurements have evidenced the presence of almost the same type of adsorbed species during the course of the reaction, but with different relative intensities. The results indicate that using as support of Ni a reducible metal oxide that is capable of developing the basicity associated with medium-strength basic sites and a suitable balance between metallic sites and centers linked to the support leads to high CO2 methanation activity. In addition, the results obtained by operando FTIR spectroscopy suggest that CO2 methanation follows the formate pathway over the catalysts under consideration.Publication Open Access Remarkable performance of supported Rh catalysts in the dry and combined reforming of biogas at high space velocities(Elsevier, 2024) Navarro Puyuelo, Andrea; Atienza Martínez, María; Reyero Zaragoza, Inés; Bimbela Serrano, Fernando; Gandía Pascual, Luis; Ciencias; Zientziak; Institute for Advanced Materials and Mathematics - INAMAT2; Universidad Pública de Navarra / Nafarroako Unibertsitate PublikoaDry and combined (with O2) reforming of synthetic biogas were studied at 700 °C using 0.5 % Rh catalysts prepared by impregnation on different supports: γ-Al2O3, SiO2, TiO2, ZrO2 and CeO2. Gas hourly space velocity (GHSV) was varied between 150 and 700 N L CH4/(gcat·h), and two O2/CH4 molar ratios of 0 and 0.12 were studied. Rh/Al2O3 catalysts (prepared using two different commercial supports here denoted as Sph and AA) presented the highest biogas conversion and syngas yields under both dry and combined reforming conditions. Catalytic activities were as follows: Rh/AA ≈ Rh/Sph > Rh/SiO2 > Rh/ZrO2 ≈ Rh/CeO2 > Rh/TiO2. The effect of catalysts’ calcination pre-treatment at relatively low (200 °C) and high temperatures (750 °C) was also studied. Calcination at high temperatures had a detrimental effect on both dry and combined reforming activities. However, a positive effect on the reforming activities and syngas yields was observed when the catalysts were calcined at 200 °C, especially under biogas combined reforming conditions: higher CH4 conversions and syngas yields could be achieved, as well as increasing CO2 conversions, though at the expense of lower H2/CO molar ratios.Publication Embargo How bimetallic CoMo carbides and nitrides improve CO oxidation(Elsevier, 2023) Villasana, Yanet; García Macedo, Jorge A.; Navarro Puyuelo, Andrea; Reyero Zaragoza, Inés; Lara, Hugo; Bimbela Serrano, Fernando; Gandía Pascual, Luis; Brito, Joaquin L.; Méndez, Franklin J.; Institute for Advanced Materials and Mathematics - INAMAT2CO elimination is an important step for the proper management of gaseous effluents from various processes, thus avoiding adverse impacts on the environment and human health. In this study, different bimetallic Al2O3-supported CoMo catalysts have been developed, characterized, and tested in the CO oxidation reaction, based on their respective oxides, carbides, and nitrides phases. The parent CoMo-oxide catalyst (CoMo) was prepared by impregnation and then transformed to its carburized (CoMoC) and nitrided (CoMoN) forms using temperatureprogrammed reaction methods under controlled atmospheres of CH4/H2 and NH3, respectively. The catalytic results demonstrate that the CoMoC catalyst exhibits higher activity compared to its CoMoN counterpart, and both are more active than the parent CoMo catalyst. Furthermore, the reduction temperature and space velocity were key process factors, which notably influenced activity and kinetic parameters, while the increase of reduction time does not seem to improve catalytic behavior. These results were associated with a better metal dispersion, and relatively higher reduction grade and metallic surface area on the carbides and nitrides, opening the possibility that new adsorption sites may be created. The catalytic results compare favorably with other nonnoble metal catalysts, such as Cr-, Cu-, Fe-, and Ni-based samples, and highlight the potential of using carbides and nitrides as alternative formulations to enhance the performance of CO oxidation.Publication Open Access Exploring a low-cost valorization route for amazonian cocoa pod husks through thermochemical and catalytic upgrading of pyrolysis vapors(American Chemical Society, 2023) Villasana, Yanet; Armenise, Sabino; Ábrego, Javier; Hablich, Karina; Bimbela Serrano, Fernando; Cornejo Ibergallartu, Alfonso; Gandía Pascual, Luis; Ciencias; Zientziak; Institute for Advanced Materials and Mathematics - INAMAT2; Universidad Pública de Navarra / Nafarroako Unibertsitate PublikoaEcuador as an international leader in the production of cocoa beans produced more than 300 000 tons in 2021; hence, the management and valorization of the 2 MM tons of waste generated annually by this industry have a strategic and socioeconomic value. Consequently, appropriate technologies to avoid environmental problems and promote sustainable development and the bioeconomy, especially considering that this is a megadiverse country, are of the utmost relevance. For this reason, we explored a low-cost pyrolysis route for valorizing cocoa pod husks from Ecuador’s Amazonian region, aiming at producing pyrolysis liquids (bio-oil), biochar, and gas as an alternative chemical source from cocoa residues in the absence of hydrogen. Downstream catalytic processing of hot pyrolysis vapors using Mo- and/or Ni-based catalysts and standalone γ-Al2O3 was applied for obtaining upgraded bio-oils in a laboratory-scale fixed bed reactor, at 500 °C in a N2 atmosphere. As a result, bimetallic catalysts increased the bio-oil aqueous phase yield by 6.6%, at the expense of the organic phase due to cracking reactions according to nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (GC–MS) results. Overall product yield remained constant, in comparison to pyrolysis without any downstream catalytic treatment (bio-oil ∼39.0–40.0 wt % and permanent gases 24.6–26.6 wt %). Ex situ reduced and passivated MoNi/γ-Al2O3 led to the lowest organic phase and highest aqueous phase yields. The product distribution between the two liquid phases was also modified by the catalytic upgrading experiments carried out, according to heteronuclear single-quantum correlation (HSQC), total correlation spectroscopy (TOCSY), and NMR analyses. The detailed composition distribution reported here shows the chemical production potential of this residue and serves as a starting point for subsequent valorizing technologies and/or processes in the food and nonfood industry beneficiating society, environment, economy, and research.Publication Open Access Highly selective CO formation via CO2 hydrogenation over novel ceria-based high-entropy oxides (HEOs)(Elsevier, 2025-03-01) Cortázar, María; Lafuente Adiego, Marta; Navarro Puyuelo, Andrea; García, Xènia; Llorca Piqué, Jordi; Reyero Zaragoza, Inés; Bimbela Serrano, Fernando; Gandía Pascual, Luis; Ciencias; Zientziak; Institute for Advanced Materials and Mathematics - INAMAT2; Universidad Pública de Navarra / Nafarroako Unibertsitate PublikoaIn the present study, new ceria-based high-entropy oxides (HEOs) were investigated as CO2 hydrogenation catalysts. The nominal composition was (Ce0.5Ni0.1Co0.1Cu0.1Zn0.1Mg0.1)Ox and the synthesis was accomplished through the citrate complexing sol-gel method. Characterization techniques utilized including ICP-AES, in situ XRD and in situ XPS, SEM-EDS, HR-TEM and HAADF-STEM, Raman spectroscopy, H2-TPR, CO2-TPD and N2 physical adsorption. The physicochemical characterization and the catalytic results revealed that the conditions of the thermal treatments at which the oxides were subjected critically determined the catalytic performance, especially the CO2 hydrogenation products selectivities. Calcination in air and/or reduction in hydrogen conducted at temperatures below 500 °C led to active but poorly selective catalysts that produced both methane and CO with significant yields. This was mainly attributed to the presence of metallic Cu, Ni and Co on the catalysts that appeared to be supported on ceria doped with the rest of the formulation elements. In contrast, thermal treatments at 750 °C favored the formation of a rocksalt entropy-stabilized (NiCoCuZnMg)Ox HEO supported on ceria that has stood out for showing an excellent selectivity towards the reverse water¿gas shift (RWGS) reaction. This catalyst led to CO selectivities of almost 100 % over a very wide range of reaction temperatures (300-700 °C). Long-term stability tests (100 h) showed only a slight decrease in CO2 conversion, while CO selectivity remained stable at nearly 100 % at 400 °C. XRD characterization of the used catalysts evidenced that, whereas the basic catalyst structure remained, some metallic copper exsolved during reduction and reaction period. These results are relevant and very promising, opening a door to the development of new catalysts for the valorization of CO2 through the RWGS reaction, thus expanding the low-temperature limit at which this process can be carried out selectively.Publication Open Access Innovative flow-through reaction system for the sustainable production of phenolic monomers from lignocellulose catalyzed by supported Mo2C(Wiley, 2024) Maisterra Udi, Maitane; Atienza Martínez, María; Hablich Alvarracin, Karina Lissett; Moreira, Rui; Martínez Merino, Víctor; Gandía Pascual, Luis; Cornejo Ibergallartu, Alfonso; Bimbela Serrano, Fernando; Ciencias; Zientziak; Institute for Advanced Materials and Mathematics - INAMAT2; Universidad Pública de Navarra - Nafarroako Unibertsitate PublikoaMolybdenum carbide supported on activated carbon (β-Mo2C/AC) has been tested as catalyst in the reductive catalytic fractionation (RCF) of lignocellulosic biomass both in batch and in Flow-Through (FT) reaction systems. High phenolic monomer yields (34 wt.%) and selectivity to monomers with reduced side alkyl chains (up to 80 wt.%) could be achieved in batch in the presence of hydrogen. FT-RCF were made with no hydrogen feed, thus via transfer hydrogenation from ethanol. Similar selectivity could be attained in FT-RCF using high catalyst/biomass ratios (0.6) and high molybdenum loading (35 wt.%) in the catalyst, although selectivity decreased with lower catalyst/biomass ratios or molybdenum contents. Regardless of these parameters, high delignification of the lignocellulosic biomass and similar monomer yields were observed in the FT mode (13-15 wt.%) while preserving the holocellulose fractions in the delignified pulp. FT-RCF system outperforms the batch reaction mode in the absence of hydrogen, both in terms of activity and selectivity to reduced monomers that is attributed to the two-step non-equilibrium processes and the removal of diffusional limitations that occur in the FT mode. Even though some molybdenum leaching was detected, the catalytic performance could be maintained with negligible loss of activity or selectivity for 15 consecutive runs.Publication Open Access The 3D-printing fabrication of multichannel silicone microreactors for catalytic applications(MDPI, 2023) Ibáñez de Garayo Quilchano, Alejandro; Imizcoz Aramburu, Mikel; Maisterra Udi, Maitane; Almazán, Fernando; Sanz Carrillo, Diego; Bimbela Serrano, Fernando; Cornejo Ibergallartu, Alfonso; Pellejero, Ismael; Gandía Pascual, Luis; Institute for Advanced Materials and Mathematics - INAMAT2; Universidad Pública de Navarra / Nafarroako Unibertsitate PublikoaMicrostructured reactors (MSRs) are especially indicated for highly demanding heterogeneous catalysis due to the small channel dimensions that minimize diffusional limitations and enhance mass and heat transport between the fluid and the catalyst. Herein, we present the fabrication protocol of the fused filament 3D printing of silicone monolithic microreactors based on a multichannel design. Microchannels of 200 to 800 µm in width and up to 20 mm in length were developed following the scaffold-removal procedure using acrylonitrile butadiene styrene (ABS) as the material for the 3D-printed scaffold fabrication, polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) as the building material, and acetone as the ABS removing agent. The main printing parameters such as temperature and printing velocity were optimized in order to minimize the bridging effect and filament collapsing and intercrossing. Heterogeneous catalysts were incorporated into the microchannel walls during fabrication, thus avoiding further post-processing steps. The nanoparticulated catalyst was deposited on ABS scaffolds through dip coating and transferred to the microchannel walls during the PDMS pouring step and subsequent scaffold removal. Two different designs of the silicone monolithic microreactors were tested for four catalytic applications, namely liquid-phase 2-nitrophenol photohydrogenation and methylene blue photodegradation in aqueous media, lignin depolymerization in ethanol, and gas-phase CO2 hydrogenation, in order to investigate the microreactor performance under different reaction conditions (temperature and solvent) and establish the possible range of applications.Publication Open Access Comparative study of supported Ni and Co catalysts prepared using the All-in-One method in the hydrogenation of CO2: effects of using (Poly)Vinyl Alcohol (PVA) as an additive(MDPI, 2024) Navarrete Rodríguez, Luisa Fernanda; Atienza Martínez, María; Reyero Zaragoza, Inés; Urroz Unzueta, José Carlos; Amorrortu, Oihana; Sanz Iturralde, Oihane; Montes, Mario; Garcés, Siby I.; Bimbela Serrano, Fernando; Gandía Pascual, Luis; Institute for Advanced Materials and Mathematics - INAMAT2; Ingeniería; IngeniaritzaTwo series of Ni and Co catalysts supported onto La-Al2O3 were prepared and the CO2 hydrogenation reactions investigated. The catalytic performance was evaluated in terms of the evolution with the reaction temperature of the CO2 conversion and product (CH4 and CO) yields, as well as specific activities (TOF) and apparent activation energies. CH4 was the favored product over both metals while the TOF for CH4 formation was about three times higher for Ni than Co at 240–265 °C. Metallic particle size effects were found, with the TOF for CH4 formation decreasing over both Ni and Co as the mean metallic size decreased. In contrast, the TOF for CO formation tended to increase at a decreasing particle size for the catalysts with the smallest Ni particle sizes. The apparent activation energies for Ni and Co were very similar and significantly decreased to values of 73–79 kJ/mol when the metallic dispersion increased. The catalysts were prepared using the all-in-one method, resulting in (poly)vinyl alcohol (PVA) being a key additive that allowed us to enhance the dispersion of Ni and Co to give very effective catalysts. This comparative study joins the few existing ones in the literature in which catalysts based on these metals operated under strictly the same reaction conditions.