Strain Relaxation in Metal Alloy Catalysts Steers the Product Selectivity of Electrocatalytic CO2 Reduction

Strain engineering in bimetallic alloy structures is of great interest in electrochemical CO2 reduction reactions (CO2RR), in which it simultaneously improves electrocatalytic activity and product selectivity by optimizing the binding properties of intermediates. However, a reliable synthetic strate...

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Published inACS nano Vol. 16; no. 2; pp. 3251 - 3263
Main Authors Hao, Jican, Zhuang, Zechao, Hao, Jiace, Cao, Kecheng, Hu, Yuxiong, Wu, Wenbo, Lu, Shuanglong, Wang, Chan, Zhang, Nan, Wang, Dingsheng, Du, Mingliang, Zhu, Han
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published American Chemical Society 22.02.2022
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Summary:Strain engineering in bimetallic alloy structures is of great interest in electrochemical CO2 reduction reactions (CO2RR), in which it simultaneously improves electrocatalytic activity and product selectivity by optimizing the binding properties of intermediates. However, a reliable synthetic strategy and systematic understanding of the strain effects in the CO2RR are still lacking. Herein, we report a strain relaxation strategy used to determine lattice strains in bimetal MNi alloys (M = Pd, Ag, and Au) and realize an outstanding CO2-to-CO Faradaic efficiency of 96.6% and show the outstanding activity and durability toward a Zn-CO2 battery. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations predict that the relaxation of strained PdNi alloys (s-PdNi) is correlated with increases in synthesis temperature, and the high temperature activation energy drives complete atomic mixing of multiple metal atoms to allow for regulation of lattice strains. Density functional theory (DFT) calculations reveal that strain relaxation effectively improves CO2RR activity and selectivity by optimizing the formation energies of *COOH and *CO intermediates on s-PdNi alloy surfaces, as also verified by in situ spectroscopic investigations. This approach provides a promising approach for catalyst design, enabling independent optimization of formation energies of reaction intermediates to improve catalytic activity and selectivity simultaneously.
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ISSN:1936-0851
1936-086X
DOI:10.1021/acsnano.1c11145