Experimental and Computational
Investigation of Au<sub>25</sub> Clusters and CO<sub>2</sub>: A Unique
Interaction and Enhanced
Electrocatalytic Activity
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Abstract
Atomically precise, inherently charged Au<sub>25</sub> clusters
are an exciting prospect for promoting catalytically challenging reactions,
and we have studied the interaction between CO<sub>2</sub> and Au<sub>25</sub>. Experimental results indicate a reversible Au<sub>25</sub>–CO<sub>2</sub> interaction that produced spectroscopic and
electrochemical changes similar to those seen with cluster oxidation.
Density functional theory (DFT) modeling indicates these changes stem
from a CO<sub>2</sub>-induced redistribution of charge within the
cluster. Identification of this spontaneous coupling led to the application
of Au<sub>25</sub> as a catalyst for the electrochemical reduction
of CO<sub>2</sub> in aqueous media. Au<sub>25</sub> promoted the CO<sub>2</sub> → CO reaction within 90 mV of the formal potential
(thermodynamic limit), representing an approximate 200–300
mV improvement over larger Au nanoparticles and bulk Au. Peak CO<sub>2</sub> conversion occurred at −1 V (vs RHE) with approximately
100% efficiency and a rate 7–700 times higher than that for
larger Au catalysts and 10–100 times higher than those for
current state-of-the-art processes