28 research outputs found
Sulfur-Modulated Tin Sites Enable Highly Selective Electrochemical Reduction of CO2 to Formate
Electrochemical reduction of carbon dioxide (CO2RR) to formate provides an avenue to the synthesis of value-added carbon-based fuels and feedstocks powered using renewable electricity. Here, we hypothesized that the presence of sulfur atoms in the catalyst surface could promote undercoordinated sites, and thereby improve the electrochemical reduction of CO2 to formate. We explored, using density functional theory, how the incorporation of sulfur into tin may favor formate generation. We used atomic layer deposition of SnSx followed by a reduction process to synthesize sulfur-modulated tin (Sn(S)) catalysts. X-ray absorption near-edge structure (XANES) studies reveal higher oxidation states in Sn(S) compared with that of tin in Sn nanoparticles. Sn(S)/Au accelerates CO2RR at geometric current densities of 55 mA cmâ2 at â0.75 V versus reversible hydrogen electrode with a Faradaic efficiency of 93%. Furthermore, Sn(S) catalysts show excellent stability without deactivation (<2% productivity change) following more than 40 hours of operation. With rapid advances in the efficient and cost-effective conversion of sunlight to electrical power, the development of storage technologies for renewable energy is even more urgent. Using renewable electricity to convert CO2 into formate simultaneously addresses the need for storage of intermittent renewable energy sources and the need to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. We report an increase of greater than 4-fold in the current density (hence the rate of reaction) in formate electrosynthesis compared with relevant controls. Our catalysts also show excellent stability without deactivation (<2% productivity change) following more than 40 hours of operation. The electrochemical reduction of carbon dioxide (CO2RR) offers a compelling route to energy storage and high-value chemical manufacture. The presence of sulfur atoms in catalyst surfaces promotes undercoordinated sites, thereby improving the electrochemical reduction of CO2 to formate. The resulting sulfur-modulated tin catalysts accelerate CO2RR at geometric current densities of 55 mA cmâ2 at â0.75 V versus RHE with a Faradaic efficiency of 93%
Solution-processed semiconductors for next-generation photodetectors
Efficient light detection is central to modern science and technology.Current photodetectors mainly use photodiodes based on crystalline inorganic elementalsemiconductors, such as silicon, or compounds such as IIIâV semiconductors. Photodetectorsmade of solution-processed semiconductors â which include organic materials, metal-halideperovskites and quantum dots â have recently emerged as candidates for next-generation lightsensing. They combine ease of processing, tailorable optoelectronic properties, facile integrationwith complementary metalâoxideâsemiconductors, compatibility with flexible substrates andgood performance. Here, we review the recent advances and the open challenges in the field ofsolution-processed photodetectors, examining the topic from both the materials and the deviceperspective and highlighting the potential of the synergistic combination of materials and deviceengineering. We explore hybrid phototransistorsand their potential to overcome trade-offsin noise, gain and speed, as well as the rapid advances in metal-halide perovskite photodiodesand their recent application in narrowband filterless photodetection
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A Surface Reconstruction Route to High Productivity and Selectivity in CO2 Electroreduction toward C2+ Hydrocarbons
© 2018 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim Electrochemical carbon dioxide reduction (CO2) is a promising technology to use renewable electricity to convert CO2 into valuable carbon-based products. For commercial-scale applications, however, the productivity and selectivity toward multi-carbon products must be enhanced. A facile surface reconstruction approach that enables tuning of CO2-reduction selectivity toward C2+ products on a copper-chloride (CuCl)-derived catalyst is reported here. Using a novel wet-oxidation process, both the oxidation state and morphology of Cu surface are controlled, providing uniformity of the electrode morphology and abundant surface active sites. The Cu surface is partially oxidized to form an initial Cu (I) chloride layer which is subsequently converted to a Cu (I) oxide surface. High C2+ selectivity on these catalysts are demonstrated in an H-cell configuration, in which 73% Faradaic efficiency (FE) for C2+ products is reached with 56% FE for ethylene (C2H4) and overall current density of 17 mA cm-2. Thereafter, the method into a flow-cell configuration is translated, which allows operation in a highly alkaline medium for complete suppression of CH4 production. A record C2+ FE of â84% and a half-cell power conversion efficiency of 50% at a partial current density of 336 mA cm-2 using the reconstructed Cu catalyst are reported
Accurate characterization of next-generation thin-film photodetectors
The performance of photodetectors fabricated from emerging semiconductors such as perovskites, quantum dots, two-dimensional materials or organics, for example, can be prone to misinterpretation. This Comment exposes the problems and proposes some guidelines for accurate characterization