4.8 Article

Molecular-Scale Insights into Electrochemical Reduction of CO2 on Hydrophobically Modified Cu Surfaces

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 13, Issue 40, Pages 47619-47628

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.1c13529

Keywords

CO2 reduction reaction; hydrophobic electrode; in situ spectroscopy; interfacial water structure; modified catalyst

Funding

  1. Recruitment Program of Thousand Youth Talents
  2. Natural Science Foundation of China [22072013]
  3. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2020M673169]

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This research reveals the mechanism of improvement in CO2 reduction reaction using hydrophobically molecule-modified catalysts, showing that these molecules reduce the dissociation of H2O, leading to a decreased H+ source for the HER and increased selectivity in CO2RR.
Depressing the competitive hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) to promote current efficiency toward carbon-based chemicals in the electrocatalytic CO2 reduction reaction (CO2RR) is desirable. A strategy is to apply the hydrophobically molecular-modified electrodes. However, the molecular-scale catalytic process remains poorly understood. Using alkanethiol-modified hydrophobic Cu as an electrode and CO2-saturated KHCO3 as an electrolyte, we reveal that H2O, rather than HCO3-, is the major H+ source for the HER, determined by differential electrochemical mass spectrometry with isotopic labeling. As a result, using in situ Raman, we find that the hydrophobic molecules screen the cathodic electric field effect on the reorientation of interfacial H2O to a H-down configuration toward Cu surfaces that corresponds to the decreased content of H-bonding-free water, leading to unfavorable H2O dissociation and thus decreased H+ source for the HER. Further, density functional theory calculations suggest that the absorbed alkanethiol molecules alter the electronic structure of Cu sites, thus decreasing the formation energy barrier of CO2RR intermediates, which consequently increases the CO2RR selectivity. This work provides a molecular-level understanding of improved CO2RR on hydrophobically molecule-modified catalysts and presents general references for catalytic systems having H2O-involved competitive HER.

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