4.8 Article

Selective CO2 Photoreduction into C2 Product Enabled by Charge-Polarized Metal Pair Sites

Journal

NANO LETTERS
Volume 21, Issue 5, Pages 2324-2331

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.1c00383

Keywords

CO2 photoreduction; C-C coupling; C-2 product; selective reduction; charge-polarized pair sites

Funding

  1. National Key R&D Program of China [2019YFA0210004, 2017YFA0207301, 2017YFA0303500]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21975242, U2032212, 21890754]
  3. Strategic Priority Research Program of Chinese Academy of Sciences [XDB36000000]
  4. Youth Innovation Promotion Association of CAS [CX2340007003]
  5. Key Research Program of Frontier Sciences of CAS [QYZDY-SSW-SLH011]
  6. Major Program of Development Foundation of Hefei Center for Physical Science and Technology [2020HSC-CIP003]
  7. Users with Excellence Program of Hefei Science Center CAS [2020HSC-UE001]
  8. University Synergy Innovation Program of Anhui Province [GXXT-2020-001]
  9. Fok Ying-Tong Education Foundation [161012]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Selective CO2 photoreduction into a high-energy-density C-2 product is challenging, but can be enhanced by designing charge-polarized metal pairs sites. Theoretical calculations and experimental results confirm the asymmetric charge distribution on surface cobalt sites and the formation mechanism of the products. Electron-rich cobalt sites strengthen their interaction with oxygen in the intermediates, facilitating the formation of the desired product.
Selective CO2 photoreduction into a high-energy-density C-2 product is still challenging. Here, charge-polarized metal pair sites are designed to trigger C-C coupling through manipulating asymmetric charge distribution on the reduction intermediates. Taking the synthetic partially reduced Co3O4 nanosheets as an example, theoretical calculations unveil the asymmetric charge distribution on surface cobalt sites. The formed charge-polarized cobalt pair sites not only donate electrons to CO2 molecules but also accelerate the coupling of asymmetric COOH* intermediates through lowering the energy barrier from 0.680 to 0.240 eV, affirmed by quasi in situ X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and Gibbs free energy calculations. Also, the electron-rich cobalt sites strengthen their interaction with O of the HOOC-CH2O* intermediate, which favors the C-O bond cleavage and hence facilitates the rate-limiting CH3COOH desorption process. The partially reduced Co3O4 nanosheets achieve 92.5% selectivity of CH3COOH in simulated air, while the CO2-to-CH3COOH conversion ratio is 2.75%, obviously higher than that in pure CO2.

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