Carbon-based materials have been applied as cost-effective electrocatalysts to reduce carbon dioxide (CO) into valuable chemicals. Here, an environment-friendly method is proposed to obtain nitrogen-doped porous carbons (NPCs) from digested sludge, which is an abundant waste product from sewage treatment plants. The materials were used as a metal-free electrocatalyst for electrochemical reduction of CO to formate. The synthesized material (NPC-600) had a mesoporous and microporous structure with a specific surface area of 246.21 m g and pore volume of 0.494 cm g. Active sites based on nitrogen atoms accounted for 2.98 atom% of the content and included pyrrolic-, pyridinic-, and graphitic-N, which is useful for CO adsorption and electron transfer in electrochemical reduction. The Faradaic efficiency for formate production from CO in the presence of NPC-600 was 68% at the potential of -1.5 V vs. SCE. Tafel analysis indicated that the pathway of CO conversion involved the reduction of CO to CO* intermediate, which was then converted to HCOO* and finally formate.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.143575 | DOI Listing |
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