The electrocatalytic CO reduction to yield C2 products is of particular interest in solar-to-fuel conversion schemes. The nanocrystalline oxide derived copper (ODCu) electrodes are specifically attractive due to their high faradaic efficiency towards C2 hydrocarbons like ethylene, ethane, acetate and ethanol. However, the mechanistic understanding of this special selectivity is still an impediment. In this work, ODCu is obtained from CuO nanowires and employed for electrocatalytic CO reduction, during which ethylene is found to be the major product with a faradaic efficiency of 65% at -0.8 V (vs. RHE). By in situ photoresponse measurement, combined with the ex situ structure and composition analysis, CuO is demonstrated to be persistent on the surface of ODCu throughout the CO reduction reaction (CORR) even at high applied bias (-1.0 V vs. RHE), while CuO is not present on the bulk Cu foil. Density functional theory calculations are employed to further investigate the correlation between the surface CuO on ODCu and its C2 selectivity performance, which is attributed to the orbital interactions between the persistent oxide and CO reduction intermediates. It should be noted that uncovering the active sites is the initial step to understand the surface reaction chemistry in CORR; here, we propose that the presence of CuO is the key for C2 selectivity during CORR in the ODCu system, which may facilitate the development of highly efficient catalysts.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c9cp06009j | DOI Listing |
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!