Synergistic enhancement of electrocatalytic CO 2 reduction to C 2 oxygenates at nitrogen-doped nanodiamonds/Cu interface

To date, effective control over the electrochemical reduction of CO to multicarbon products (C ≥ 2) has been very challenging. Here, we report a design principle for the creation of a selective yet robust catalytic interface for heterogeneous electrocatalysts in the reduction of CO to C oxygenates,...

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Published inNature nanotechnology Vol. 15; no. 2; p. 131
Main Authors Wang, Hongxia, Tzeng, Yan-Kai, Ji, Yongfei, Li, Yanbin, Li, Jun, Zheng, Xueli, Yang, Ankun, Liu, Yayuan, Gong, Yongji, Cai, Lili, Li, Yuzhang, Zhang, Xiaokun, Chen, Wei, Liu, Bofei, Lu, Haiyu, Melosh, Nicholas A, Shen, Zhi-Xun, Chan, Karen, Tan, Tianwei, Chu, Steven, Cui, Yi
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England 01.02.2020
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Summary:To date, effective control over the electrochemical reduction of CO to multicarbon products (C ≥ 2) has been very challenging. Here, we report a design principle for the creation of a selective yet robust catalytic interface for heterogeneous electrocatalysts in the reduction of CO to C oxygenates, demonstrated by rational tuning of an assembly of nitrogen-doped nanodiamonds and copper nanoparticles. The catalyst exhibits a Faradaic efficiency of ~63% towards C oxygenates at applied potentials of only -0.5 V versus reversible hydrogen electrode. Moreover, this catalyst shows an unprecedented persistent catalytic performance up to 120 h, with steady current and only 19% activity decay. Density functional theory calculations show that CO binding is strengthened at the copper/nanodiamond interface, suppressing CO desorption and promoting C production by lowering the apparent barrier for CO dimerization. The inherent compositional and electronic tunability of the catalyst assembly offers an unrivalled degree of control over the catalytic interface, and thereby the reaction energetics and kinetics.
ISSN:1748-3395