For decades, scientists have struggled to develop inexpensive ways to use methane without also producing carbon dioxide, both of which are #GreenhouseGases. Among the possible solutions is dry reforming, a process that has the potential to convert both methane and carbon dioxide into chemical feedstocks. But dry reforming of methane isn't commercially viable using existing nickel-based catalysts, which stop functioning because their catalytically active particles become covered with carbon deposits (coking) or combine into larger, less active particles (sintering). Now, researchers from the University at Buffalo and the U.S. Department of Energy’s Berkeley Lab have developed a one-step process to make nanoshell catalysts, which resist both coking and sintering.
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