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Promoting CO2 Electroreduction to Acetate by an Amine-Terminal, Dendrimer-Functionalized Cu Catalyst.


ABSTRACT: Acetate derived from electrocatalytic CO2 reduction represents a potential low-carbon synthesis approach. However, the CO2-to-acetate activity and selectivity are largely inhibited by the low surface coverage of in situ generated *CO, as well as the inefficient ethenone intermediate formation due to the side reaction between CO2 and alkaline electrolytes. Tuning catalyst microenvironments by chemical modification of the catalyst surface is a potential strategy to enhance CO2 capture and increase local *CO concentrations, while it also increases the selectivity of side reduction products, such as methane or ethylene. To solve this challenge, herein, we developed a hydrophilic amine-tailed, dendrimer network with enhanced *CO intermediate coverage on Cu catalytic sites while at the same time retaining the in situ generated OH- as a high local pH environment that favors the ethenone intermediate toward acetate. The optimized amine-network coordinated Cu catalyst (G3-NH2/Cu) exhibits one of the highest CO2-to-acetate Faradaic efficiencies of 47.0% with a partial current density of 202 mA cm-2 at -0.97 V versus the reversible hydrogen electrode.

SUBMITTER: Yang L 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC10604016 | biostudies-literature | 2023 Oct

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Promoting CO<sub>2</sub> Electroreduction to Acetate by an Amine-Terminal, Dendrimer-Functionalized Cu Catalyst.

Yang Li L   Lv Ximeng X   Peng Chen C   Kong Shuyi S   Huang Fuqiang F   Tang Yi Y   Zhang Lijuan L   Zheng Gengfeng G  

ACS central science 20230926 10


Acetate derived from electrocatalytic CO<sub>2</sub> reduction represents a potential low-carbon synthesis approach. However, the CO<sub>2</sub>-to-acetate activity and selectivity are largely inhibited by the low surface coverage of <i>in situ</i> generated *CO, as well as the inefficient ethenone intermediate formation due to the side reaction between CO<sub>2</sub> and alkaline electrolytes. Tuning catalyst microenvironments by chemical modification of the catalyst surface is a potential stra  ...[more]

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