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Time-Resolved Infrared Spectroscopic Evidence for Interfacial pH-Dependent Kinetics of Formate Evolution on Cu Electrodes. | LitMetric

Time-Resolved Infrared Spectroscopic Evidence for Interfacial pH-Dependent Kinetics of Formate Evolution on Cu Electrodes.

ACS Catal

Department of Chemical Engineering, MESA+ Institute for Nanotechnology, University of Twente Faculty of Science and Technology, Drienerlolaan 5, Enschede 7522 NB, The Netherlands.

Published: September 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study utilized rapid-scan electrochemical FT-IR spectroscopy to investigate the reduction of carbon monoxide (CO) to formate in a specific solution, focusing on the effects of electrolyte potential changes near a copper electrode.
  • Key findings show that CO quickly converts to formate under mildly acidic conditions, while bicarbonate also reduces to formate but more slowly, and carbonate does not lead to formate production at all.
  • The research also explored using pulsed electrolysis to enhance formate production rates; however, this method initially increased CO concentration but eventually caused electrode deactivation due to the formation of undesired copper carbonates.

Article Abstract

By deployment of rapid-scan (second time scale) electrochemical FT-IR reflection-absorption spectroscopy, we studied the reduction of CO in 0.1 M NaSO in deuterated water at a pD of 3.7. We report on the impact of dynamic changes in the bicarbonate equilibrium concentration in the vicinity of a polycrystalline Cu electrode, induced by step changes in applied electrode potential. We correlate these changes in interfacial composition and concentrations of dissolved species to the formation rate of formate, and provide evidence for the following conclusions: (i) the kinetics for the conversion of dissolved CO to formate (formic acid) are fast, (ii) bicarbonate is also converted to formate, but with less favorable kinetics, and (iii) carbonate does not yield any formate. These results reveal that formate formation requires (mildly) acidic conditions at the interface for CO to undergo a proton-coupled conversion step, and we postulate that bicarbonate reduction to formate is driven by catalytic hydrogenation via in situ formed H. Interestingly CO was not observed, suggesting that the kinetics of the CO to CO reaction are significantly less favorable than formate formation under the experimental conditions (pH and applied potential). We also analyzed the feasibility of pulsed electrolysis to enhance the (average) rate of formation of formate. While a short positive potential pulse enhances the CO concentration, this also leads to the formation of basic copper carbonates, resulting in electrode deactivation. These observations demonstrate the potential of rapid-scan EC-IRRAS to elucidate the mechanisms and kinetics of electrochemical reactions, offering valuable insights for optimizing catalyst and electrolyte performance and advancing CO reduction technologies.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11420947PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acscatal.4c03521DOI Listing

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