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Highly Efficient Carbon Dioxide Electroreduction via DNA-Directed Catalyst Immobilization. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • - The electrochemical reduction of carbon dioxide (CO) can be enhanced using DNA as a molecular-scale "Velcro" to attach porphyrin-based catalysts to electrode surfaces, improving their effectiveness.
  • - This method increases the stability of the catalysts and boosts their Faradaic efficiencies, achieving nearly 100% efficiency in immobilization on carbon electrodes.
  • - The results show that DNA-immobilized catalysts require lower potentials to generate carbon monoxide (CO) and exhibit significantly higher efficiencies, reaching up to 79.1% for CO production, indicating a promising approach for various aqueous reactions.

Article Abstract

Electrochemical reduction of carbon dioxide (CO) is a promising route to up-convert this industrial byproduct. However, to perform this reaction with a small-molecule catalyst, the catalyst must be proximal to an electrode surface. Efforts to immobilize molecular catalysts on electrodes have been stymied by the need to optimize the immobilization chemistries on a case-by-case basis. Taking inspiration from nature, we applied DNA as a molecular-scale "Velcro" to investigate the tethering of three porphyrin-based catalysts to electrodes. This tethering strategy improved both the stability of the catalysts and their Faradaic efficiencies (FEs). DNA-catalyst conjugates were immobilized on screen-printed carbon and carbon paper electrodes via DNA hybridization with nearly 100% efficiency. Following immobilization, a higher catalyst stability at relevant potentials is observed. Additionally, lower overpotentials are required for the generation of carbon monoxide (CO). Finally, high FE for CO generation was observed with the DNA-immobilized catalysts as compared to the unmodified small-molecule systems, as high as 79.1% FE for CO at -0.95 V vs SHE using a DNA-tethered catalyst. This work demonstrates the potential of DNA "Velcro" as a powerful strategy for catalyst immobilization. Here, we demonstrated improved catalytic characteristics of molecular catalysts for CO valorization, but this strategy is anticipated to be generalizable to any reaction that proceeds in aqueous solutions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11040669PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacsau.3c00823DOI Listing

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