4 research outputs found

    Au/Pb Interface Allows Methane Formation Pathway in Carbon Dioxide Electroreduction

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    The electrochemical conversion of carbon dioxide (CO2) to high-value chemicals is an attractive approach to create an artificial carbon cycle. Tuning the activity and product selectivity while maintaining long-term stability, however, remains a significant challenge. Here, we study a series of Au-Pb bimetallic electrocatalysts with different Au/Pb interfaces, generating carbon monoxide (CO), formic acid (HCOOH), and methane (CH4) as CO2 reduction products. The formation of CH4 is significant because it has only been observed on very few Cu-free electrodes. The maximum CH4 formation rate of 0.33 mA cm(-2) was achieved when the most Au/Pb interfaces were present. In situ Raman spectroelectrochemical studies confirmed the stability of the Pb native substoichiometric oxide under the reduction conditions on the Au-Pb catalyst, which seems to be a major contributor to CH4 formation. Density functional theory simulations showed that without Au, the reaction would get stuck on the COOH intermediate, and without O, the reaction would not evolve further than the CHOH intermediate. In addition, they confirmed that the Au/Pb bimetallic interface (together with the subsurface oxygen in the model) possesses a moderate binding strength for the key intermediates, which is indeed necessary for the CH4 pathway. Overall, this study demonstrates how bimetallic nanoparticles can be employed to overcome scaling relations in the CO2 reduction reaction

    Electrically Tunable Reactivity of Substrate-Supported Cobalt Oxide Nanocrystals

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    [EN] First-row transition metal oxides are promising materials for catalyzing the oxygen evolution reaction. Surface sensitive techniques provide a unique perspective allowing the study of the structure, adsorption sites, and reactivity of catalysts at the atomic scale, which furnishes rationalization and improves the design of highly efficient catalytic materials. Here, a scanning probe microscopy study complemented by density functional theory on the structural and electronic properties of CoO nanoislands grown on Au(111) is reported. Two distinct phases are observed: The most extended displays a Moiré pattern (α-region), while the less abundant is 1Co:1Au coincidental (β-region). As a result of the surface registry, in the β-region the oxide adlayer is compressed by 9%, increasing the unoccupied local density of states and enhancing the selective water adsorption at low temperature through a cobalt inversion mechanism. Tip-induced voltage pulses irreversibly transform α- into β-regions, thus opening avenues to modify the structure and reactivity of transition metal oxides by external stimuli like electric fields.This work was supported by the European Union under the H2020 FET-PROACT A-LEAF (Artificial-Leaf ) project (Grant Agreement No. 732840). Barcelona Supercomputing Center. Grant Number: QS-2019-3-002

    Push-pull electronic effects in surface-active sites enhance electrocatalytic oxygen evolution on transition metal oxides

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    Altres ajuts: the authors thankfully acknowledge the computer resources at MareNostrum and the technical support provided by the Barcelona Supercomputing Center (QCM-2018-3-0012 Theoretical studies on catalysis optimization for an Artificial Leaf (A-LEAF)). ICN2 is funded by the CERCA Programme / Generalitat de Catalunya.Sustainable electrocatalysis of the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) constitutes a major challenge for the realization of green fuels. Oxides based on Ni and Fe in alkaline media have been proposed to avoid using critical raw materials. However, their ill-defined structures under OER conditions make the identification of key descriptors difficult. Here, we have studied Fe−Ni−Zn spinel oxides, with a well-defined crystal structure, as a platform to obtain general understanding on the key contributions. The OER reaches maximum performance when: (i) Zn is present in the Spinel structure, (ii) very dense, equimolar 1 : 1 : 1 stoichiometry sites appear on the surface as they allow the formation of oxygen vacancies where Zn favors pushing the electronic density that is pulled by the octahedral Fe and tetrahedral Ni redox pair lowering the overpotential. Our work proves cooperative electronic effects on surface active sites as key to design optimum OER electrocatalysts
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