1 research outputs found
Copper Cobalt Selenide as a Bifunctional Electrocatalyst for the Selective Reduction of CO<sub>2</sub> to Carbon-Rich Products and Alcohol Oxidation
Copper cobalt selenide, CuCo2Se4, has been
identified as an efficient catalyst for electrocatalytic CO2 reduction, exhibiting high selectivity for carbon-rich and value-added
products. Achieving product selectivity is one of the primary challenges
for CO2 reduction reactions, and the catalyst surface plays
a pivotal role in determining the reaction pathway and, more importantly,
the intermediate adsorption kinetics leading to C1- or C2+-based products.
In this research, the catalyst surface was designed to optimize the
adsorption of the intermediate CO (carbonyl) group on the catalytic
site such that its dwell time on the surface was long enough for further
reduction to carbon-rich products but not strong enough for surface
passivation and poisoning. CuCo2Se4 was synthesized
through hydrothermal method, and the assembled electrode showed the
electrocatalytic reduction of CO2 at various applied potentials
ranging from −0.1 to −0.9 V vs RHE. More importantly,
it was observed that the CuCo2Se4-modified electrode
could produce exclusive C2 products such as acetic acid and ethanol
with 100% faradaic efficiency at a lower applied potential (−0.1
to −0.3 V), while C1 products such as formic acid and methanol
were obtained at higher applied potentials (−0.9 V). Such high
selectivity and preference for acetic acid and ethanol formation highlight
the novelty of this catalyst. The catalyst surface was also probed
through density functional theory (DFT) calculations, and the high
selectivity for C2 product formation could be attributed to the optimal
CO adsorption energy on the catalytic site. It was further estimated
that the Cu site showed a better catalytic activity than Co; however,
the presence of neighboring Co atoms with the residual magnetic moment
on the surface and subsurface layers influenced the charge density
redistribution on the catalytic site after intermediate CO adsorption.
In addition to CO2 reduction, this catalytic site was also
active for alcohol oxidation producing formic or acetic acid from
methanol or ethanol, respectively, in the anodic chamber. This report
not only illustrates the highly efficient catalytic activity of CuCo2Se4 for CO2 reduction with high product
selectivity but also offers a proper insight of the catalyst surface
design and how to obtain such high selectivity, thereby providing
knowledge that can be transformative for the field
