4.8 Article

Dopant-induced electron localization drives CO2 reduction to C-2 hydrocarbons

Journal

NATURE CHEMISTRY
Volume 10, Issue 9, Pages 974-980

Publisher

NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/s41557-018-0092-x

Keywords

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Funding

  1. TOTAL S.A.
  2. Ontario Research Fund: Research Excellence Program
  3. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  4. CIFAR Bio-Inspired Solar Energy programme
  5. University of Toronto Connaught grant
  6. Ministry of Science, Natural Science Foundation of China [21471040, 21271055, 21501035]
  7. Innovation-Driven Plan in Central South University [2017CX003]
  8. State Key Laboratory of Powder Metallurgy in Central South University
  9. Thousand Youth Talents Plan of China
  10. Hundred Youth Talents Program of Hunan
  11. China Scholarship Council programme
  12. Research Foundation-Flanders (FWO)
  13. International Academic Exchange Fund for Joint PhD Students from Tianjin University
  14. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council
  15. European Research Council (ERC) [335078-COLOURATOMS]
  16. Federal Economic Development Agency of Southern Ontario
  17. Province of Ontario
  18. IBM Canada
  19. Ontario Centres of Excellence
  20. Mitacs
  21. 15 Ontario academic member institutions

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The electrochemical reduction of CO2 to multi-carbon products has attracted much attention because it provides an avenue to the synthesis of value-added carbon-based fuels and feedstocks using renewable electricity. Unfortunately, the efficiency of CO2 conversion to C-2 products remains below that necessary for its implementation at scale. Modifying the local electronic structure of copper with positive valence sites has been predicted to boost conversion to C-2 products. Here, we use boron to tune the ratio of Cu delta+ to Cu-0 active sites and improve both stability and C-2-product generation. Simulations show that the ability to tune the average oxidation state of copper enables control over CO adsorption and dimerization, and makes it possible to implement a preference for the electrosynthesis of C-2 products. We report experimentally a C-2 Faradaic efficiency of 79 +/- 2% on boron-doped copper catalysts and further show that boron doping leads to catalysts that are stable for in excess of similar to 40 hours while electrochemically reducing CO2 to multi-carbon hydrocarbons.

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