4.8 Article

High-Entropy Alloys as Catalysts for the CO2 and CO Reduction Reactions: Experimental Realization

Journal

ACS CATALYSIS
Volume 10, Issue 6, Pages 3658-3663

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acscatal.9b04302

Keywords

high-entropy alloy; redox-active; nanocatalysis; CO2 reduction reaction; DFT stimulation; microscopy analyses

Funding

  1. DST-SERB [EMR/2016/006217/MMM, EMR/2016/000806]
  2. Institute of Eminence (IoE) MHRD grant of Indian Institute of Science
  3. AOARD [FA2386-19-1-4039]

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Conversion of carbon dioxide into selective hydrocarbon using a stable catalyst remains a holy grail in the catalysis community. The high overpotential, stability, and selectivity in the use of a single-metal-based catalyst still remain a challenge. In current work, instead of using pure noble metals (Ag, Au, and Pt) as the catalyst, a nanocrystalline high-entropy alloy (HEA: AuAgPtPdCu) has been used for the conversion of CO2 into gaseous hydrocarbons. Utilizing an approach of multimetallic HEA, a faradic efficiency of about 100% toward gaseous products is obtained at a low applied potential (-0.3 V vs reversible hydrogen electrode). The reason behind the catalytic activity and selectivity of the high-entropy alloy (HEA) toward CO2 electroreduction was established through first-principles-based density functional theory (DFT) by comparing it with the pristine Cu(111) surface. This is attributed to the reversal in adsorption trends for two out of the total eight intermediates-*OCH3 and *O on Cu(111) and HEA surfaces.

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