Protecting Copper Oxidation State via Intermediate Confinement for Selective CO<sub>2</sub> Electroreduction to C<sub>2+</sub> Fuels

Peng‐Peng Yang(University of Science and Technology of China), Xiaolong Zhang(University of Science and Technology of China), Fei‐Yue Gao(University of Science and Technology of China), Ya‐Rong Zheng(University of Science and Technology of China), Zhuang‐Zhuang Niu(University of Science and Technology of China), Xingxing Yu(University of Science and Technology of China), Ren Liu(University of Science and Technology of China), Zhi‐Zheng Wu(University of Science and Technology of China), Shuai Qin(University of Science and Technology of China), Li‐Ping Chi(University of Science and Technology of China), Yu Duan(University of Science and Technology of China), Tao Ma(University of Science and Technology of China), Xusheng Zheng(University of Science and Technology of China), Junfa Zhu(University of Science and Technology of China), Huijuan Wang(University of Science and Technology of China), Min‐Rui Gao(University of Science and Technology of China), Shu‐Hong Yu(University of Science and Technology of China)
Journal of the American Chemical Society
March 16, 2020
Cited by 686

Abstract

Selective and efficient catalytic conversion of carbon dioxide (CO2) into value-added fuels and feedstocks provides an ideal avenue to high-density renewable energy storage. An impediment to enabling deep CO2 reduction to oxygenates and hydrocarbons (e.g., C2+ compounds) is the difficulty of coupling carbon–carbon bonds efficiently. Copper in the +1 oxidation state has been thought to be active for catalyzing C2+ formation, whereas it is prone to being reduced to Cu0 at cathodic potentials. Here we report that catalysts with nanocavities can confine carbon intermediates formed in situ, which in turn covers the local catalyst surface and thereby stabilizes Cu+ species. Experimental measurements on multihollow cuprous oxide catalyst exhibit a C2+ Faradaic efficiency of 75.2 ± 2.7% at a C2+ partial current density of 267 ± 13 mA cm–2 and a large C2+-to-C1 ratio of ∼7.2. Operando Raman spectra, in conjunction with X-ray absorption studies, confirm that Cu+ species in the as-designed catalyst are well retained during CO2 reduction, which leads to the marked C2+ selectivity at a large conversion rate.


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