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Qi Lu

King University

ORCID: 0000-0002-0380-2629

Publishes on CO2 Reduction Techniques and Catalysts, Electrocatalysts for Energy Conversion, Ionic liquids properties and applications. 170 papers and 15.2k citations.

170Publications
15.2kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Design of Single-Atom Co–N<sub>5</sub> Catalytic Site: A Robust Electrocatalyst for CO<sub>2</sub> Reduction with Nearly 100% CO Selectivity and Remarkable Stability
Yuan Pan, Rui Lin, Yinjuan Chen et al.|Journal of the American Chemical Society|2018
Cited by 1.2k

We develop an N-coordination strategy to design a robust CO2 reduction reaction (CO2RR) electrocatalyst with atomically dispersed Co–N5 site anchored on polymer-derived hollow N-doped porous carbon spheres. Our catalyst exhibits high selectivity for CO2RR with CO Faradaic efficiency (FECO) above 90% over a wide potential range from −0.57 to −0.88 V (the FECO exceeded 99% at −0.73 and −0.79 V). The CO current density and FECO remained nearly unchanged after electrolyzing 10 h, revealing remarkable stability. Experiments and density functional theory calculations demonstrate single-atom Co–N5 site is the dominating active center simultaneously for CO2 activation, the rapid formation of key intermediate COOH* as well as the desorption of CO.

The Central Role of Bicarbonate in the Electrochemical Reduction of Carbon Dioxide on Gold
Marco Dunwell, Qi Lu, Jeffrey Heyes et al.|Journal of the American Chemical Society|2017
Cited by 680

Much effort has been devoted in the development of efficient catalysts for electrochemical reduction of CO2. Molecular level understanding of electrode-mediated process, particularly the role of bicarbonate in increasing CO2 reduction rates, is still lacking due to the difficulty of directly probing the electrochemical interface. We developed a protocol to observe normally invisible reaction intermediates with a surface enhanced spectroscopy by applying square-wave potential profiles. Further, we demonstrate that bicarbonate, through equilibrium exchange with dissolved CO2, rather than the supplied CO2, is the primary source of carbon in the CO formed at the Au electrode by a combination of in situ spectroscopic, isotopic labeling, and mass spectroscopic investigations. We propose that bicarbonate enhances the rate of CO production on Au by increasing the effective concentration of dissolved CO2 near the electrode surface through rapid equilibrium between bicarbonate and dissolved CO2.