AI Article Synopsis

  • The study confirms the existence of subsurface oxygen in oxide-derived copper (OD-Cu) electrocatalysts, which is crucial for enhancing CO intermediate binding during CO reduction reactions.
  • It utilizes grazing incident hard X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy to validate the presence of subsurface oxygen without exposure to air, highlighting two types: oxygen at lattice defects and interstitial oxygen within the metal structure.
  • This research provides strong evidence for subsurface oxygen's role in reducing σ-repulsion effects, thereby improving the efficiency of CO RR in OD-Cu systems.

Article Abstract

Subsurface oxygen has been proposed to be crucial in oxide-derived copper (OD-Cu) electrocatalysts for enhancing the binding of CO intermediates during CO reduction reaction (CO RR). However, the presence of such oxygen species under reductive conditions still remains debated. In this work, the existence of subsurface oxygen is validated by grazing incident hard X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, where OD-Cu was prepared by reduction of Cu oxide with H without exposing to air. The results suggest two types of subsurface oxygen embedded between the fully reduced metallic surface and the Cu O buried beneath: (i) oxygen staying at lattice defects and/or vacancies in the surface-most region and (ii) interstitial oxygen intercalated in metal structure. This study adds convincing support to the presence of subsurface oxygen in OD-Cu, which previously has been suggested to play an important role to mitigate the σ-repulsion of Cu for CO intermediates in CO RR.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9299841PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/anie.202111021DOI Listing

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