To realize commercial CO electrochemical reduction to C alcohols, the selectivity and production rate should be further improved. Establishing controllable surface sites with a favorable local environment is an interesting route to guide the C pathway. Herein, we report a room-temperature one-step synthetic strategy to fabricate a highly stable Cu aerogel as an efficient CO reduction electrocatalyst. Controlling crystal growth kinetics using different reductants is an efficient strategy to modulate the nucleation and growth rate of Cu aerogels, enabling the creation of efficient surface sites for the C pathway. Over the Cu aerogel obtained by reducing Cu using a weak reductant (NH·BH), the faradaic efficiency of C products could reach 85.8% with the current density of 800 mA cm at the potential of -0.91 V reversible hydrogen electrode, and the C alcohol selectivity was 49.7% with a partial current density of 397.6 mA cm, while the Cu aerogel prepared using a strong reductant (NaBH) was favorable to generating CO. Experimental and theoretical studies showed that the selectivity of the reaction depended strongly on the desorption and dimerization of *CO intermediates on the catalysts. The strong reductant induced a defective Cu surface that could facilitate the desorption of the *CO intermediate, subsequently producing CO, whereas the low defect Cu produced using a weak reductant could significantly enhance the selectivity for the C product by improving *CO adsorption and the C-C coupling on the catalyst. This work opens a new way for constructing efficient electrocatalysts for CO electroreduction to C alcohols.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d2sc04961a | DOI Listing |
Nanoscale
January 2025
Dept. of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, Lehigh University, Bethlehem, PA 18015, USA.
Identifying facile strategies for hierarchically structuring crystalline porous materials is critical for realizing diffusion length scales suitable for broad applications. Here, we elucidate synthesis-structure-function relations governing how room temperature catalytic conditions can be exploited to tune covalent organic framework (COF) growth and thereby access unique hierarchical morphologies without the need to introduce secondary templates or structure directing molecules. Specifically, we demonstrate how scandium triflate, an efficient catalyst involved in the synthesis of imine-based COFs, can be exploited as an effective growth modifier capable of selectively titrating terminal amines on 2D COF layers to facilitate anisotropic crystal growth.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInorg Chem
January 2025
Department of Materials Chemistry, Faculty of Engineering, Shinshu University, 4-17-1 Wakasato, Nagano 380-8553, Japan.
Layered sulfide crystals are suitable hosts for lithium and sodium ions in batteries. In this study, new layered lithium titanium sulfide (LTS) crystals were grown in a sealed silica tube using a LiS self-flux at 800-950 °C. X-ray diffraction (XRD) analysis results indicated the formation of a new sulfide phase with higher symmetry in the Li-Ti-S system.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChemistry
January 2025
University of Toronto, Chemistry, 80 St George Street, M5S 3H6, Toronto, CANADA.
The synthesis of polyferrocenyldimethylsilane-b-poly(L-glutamic acid) block copolymers was systematically explored. Rod-like and plate-like micelles were prepared from self-assembly of the block copolymers in aqueous solution with two different approaches. In a dissolution-dialysis approach, micelles were prepared by dissolving a block copolymer sample in excess aqueous base followed by the dialysis of the solution against water.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNanoscale
January 2025
Physical Chemistry, TU Dresden, Zellescher Weg 19, 01069 Dresden, Germany.
Tunable optical properties exhibited by semiconductor nanocrystals (NCs) in the near infrared (NIR) spectral region are of particular interest in various applications, such as telecommunications, bioimaging, photodetection, photovoltaics, . While lead and mercury chalcogenide NCs do exhibit exemplary optical properties in the NIR, Cu-In-Se (CISe)-based NCs are a suitable environment-friendly alternative to these toxic materials. Several reports of NIR-emitting (quasi)spherical CISe NCs have been published, but their more complex-shaped counterparts remain rather less explored.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Mater
January 2025
Department of Physics, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA.
Atomically thin van der Waals (vdW) films provide a material platform for the epitaxial growth of quantum heterostructures. However, unlike the remote epitaxial growth of three-dimensional bulk crystals, the growth of two-dimensional material heterostructures across atomic layers has been limited due to the weak vdW interaction. Here we report the double-sided epitaxy of vdW layered materials through atomic membranes.
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