4.8 Article

Self-Cleaning Catalyst Electrodes for Stabilized CO2 Reduction to Hydrocarbons

Journal

ANGEWANDTE CHEMIE-INTERNATIONAL EDITION
Volume 56, Issue 42, Pages 13135-13139

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/anie.201707478

Keywords

carbon dioxide reduction; copper; electrocatalysis; palladium; surface restructuring

Funding

  1. Doctoral New Investigator grant from the ACS Petroleum Research Fund
  2. Global Innovation Initiative from Institute of International Education
  3. The Recruitment Program of Global Youth Experts of China, Shenzhen fundamental research funding [JCYJ20160608140827794]
  4. Shenzhen Key Lab funding [ZDSYS201505291525382]
  5. Peacock Plan [KQTD20140630160825828]

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A surface-restructuring strategy is presented that involves self-cleaning Cu catalyst electrodes with unprecedented catalytic stability toward CO2 reduction. Under the working conditions, the Pd atoms pre-deposited on Cu surface induce continuous morphological and compositional restructuring of the Cu surface, which constantly refreshes the catalyst surface and thus maintains the catalytic properties for CO2 reduction to hydrocarbons. The Pd-decorated Cu electrode can catalyze CO2 reduction with relatively stable selectivity and current density for up to 16h, which is one of the best catalytic durability performances among all Cu electrocatalysts for effective CO2 conversion to hydrocarbons. The generality of this approach of utilizing foreign metal atoms to induce surface restructuring toward stabilizing Cu catalyst electrodes against deactivation by carbonaceous species accumulation in CO2 reduction is further demonstrated by replacing Pd with Rh.

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