4.7 Article

Synergistic engineering of heteronuclear Ni-Ag dual-atom catalysts for high-efficiency CO2 electroreduction with nearly 100% CO selectivity

Journal

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING JOURNAL
Volume 476, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.cej.2023.146556

Keywords

CO 2 electroreduction reaction; Electron transfer; Dual -atom catalyst; In situ spectroscopy; Density functional theory

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This study investigates the synthesis of a heteronuclear Ni-Ag dual-atom catalyst loaded on defective nitrogen-rich porous carbon and studies its catalytic performance and mechanism in electrocatalytic carbon dioxide reduction. The results show that Ni-Ag/PC-N exhibits remarkable CO Faradaic efficiency and in situ studies using FTIR and Raman spectroscopy reveal an accelerated mechanism for the production of *COOH intermediates. Density functional theory calculations reveal the synergistic mechanism between the coordinated Ni atom and adjacent Ag atom on the catalyst surface.
Single-atom catalysts (SACs) have emerged as attractive materials for the electrocatalytic carbon dioxide reduction (ECO2R). Dual-atom catalysts (DACs), an extension of SACs, exhibit more compelling functionalities due to the synergistic effects between adjacent metal atoms. However, the rational design, clear coordination mode, and in-depth understanding of heteronuclear dual-atom synergistic mechanisms remain elusive. Herein, a heteronuclear Ni-Ag dual-atom catalyst loaded on defective nitrogen-rich porous carbon, denoted as Ni-Ag/PC-N, was synthesized using cascade pyrolysis. The configuration of Ni-Ag dual-atom sites is confirmed as N3-Ni-Ag-N3. Ni-Ag/PC-N demonstrates a remarkable CO Faradaic efficiency (FECO) exceeding 90% over a broad range of applied potentials, i.e., from-0.7 to-1.3 V versus reversible hydrogen electrode (RHE). The peak FECO of 99.2% is observed at-0.8 V (vs. RHE). Tafel analysis reveals that the rate-determining step of ECO2R-to-CO is the formation of the *COOH intermediate, and Ni-Ag/PC-N exhibits optimal electrokinetics. In situ FTIR and in situ Raman spectra indicate accelerated production of *COOH intermediates during the ECO2R-to-CO process. Density functional theory (DFT) calculations demonstrate that the coordinated Ni atom lowers the energy barrier of *COOH intermediates formation over the Ni-Ag/PC-N surface, while the adjacent Ag atom mitigates the catalyst poisoning caused by the strong *CO affinity on the Ni atomic site.

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