Doping strategies have been recognized as effective approaches for developing cost-effective and durable catalysts with enhanced reactivity and selectivity in the electrochemical synthesis of value-added compounds directly from CO. However, the reaction mechanism and the specific roles of heteroatom doping, such as N doping, in advancing the CO reduction reaction are still controversial due to the lack of precise control of catalyst surface microenvironments. In this study, we investigated the effects of N doping on the performances for electrochemically converting CO to CO over Ni@NCNT/graphene hybrid structured catalysts (Ni@NCNT/Gr). Ni nanoparticles (Ni NPs) were encapsulated in N-doped carbon nanotubes (NCNTs) which were generated from g-CN during the annealing process due to the thermal catalysis of the existing Ni NPs. Our results show that the optimized pyrrolic N doping level, coupled with stable NCNT/Gr hybrid structures, high electrochemically active surface area, rich active sites, and reduced Ni NP size, synergistically contribute to the distinguished electrocatalytic performances. The as-prepared Ni@NCNT/Gr-R catalyst demonstrated a high CO faradaic efficiency (>90%) with negligible differences in CO FE across a wide potential range (-0.71--0.91 V RHE) in an H-cell while maintaining magnificent stability with negligible current density loss for 24 hours at -0.71 V ( RHE). Our findings provide evidence and insight into the optimization of pyrrolic N doping levels together with reducing NP size within the stable NCNT/Gr hybrid substrate for designing efficient CO reduction catalysts.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11733626PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d4sc07354aDOI Listing

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Doping strategies have been recognized as effective approaches for developing cost-effective and durable catalysts with enhanced reactivity and selectivity in the electrochemical synthesis of value-added compounds directly from CO. However, the reaction mechanism and the specific roles of heteroatom doping, such as N doping, in advancing the CO reduction reaction are still controversial due to the lack of precise control of catalyst surface microenvironments. In this study, we investigated the effects of N doping on the performances for electrochemically converting CO to CO over Ni@NCNT/graphene hybrid structured catalysts (Ni@NCNT/Gr).

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