Promote electroreduction of CO 2 via catalyst valence state manipulation by surface-capping ligand

Author:

Zhao Yilin1ORCID,Liu Xiaoqing2,Chen Jingyi1ORCID,Chen Junmei1,Chen Jiayi1,Fan Lei1,Yang Haozhou1,Xi Shibo3,Shen Lei2ORCID,Wang Lei1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, National University of Singapore, Singapore 117585, Singapore

2. Department of Mechanical Engineering, National University of Singapore, Singapore 117575, Singapore

3. Institute of Sustainability for Chemicals, Energy and Environment, A*STAR, Jurong Island, Singapore 627833, Singapore

Abstract

Electrochemical CO 2 reduction provides a potential means for synthesizing value-added chemicals over the near equilibrium potential regime, i.e., formate production on Pd-based catalysts. However, the activity of Pd catalysts has been largely plagued by the potential-depended deactivation pathways (e.g., α -PdH to β -PdH phase transition, CO poisoning), limiting the formate production to a narrow potential window of 0 V to −0.25 V vs. reversible hydrogen electrode (RHE). Herein, we discovered that the Pd surface capped with polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) ligand exhibits effective resistance to the potential-depended deactivations and can catalyze formate production at a much extended potential window (beyond –0.7 V vs. RHE) with significantly improved activity (~14-times enhancement at −0.4 V vs. RHE) compared to that of the pristine Pd surface. Combined results from physical and electrochemical characterizations, kinetic analysis, and first-principle simulations suggest that the PVP capping ligand can effectively stabilize the high-valence-state Pd species (Pd δ+ ) resulted from the catalyst synthesis and pretreatments, and these Pd δ+  species are responsible for the inhibited phase transition from α -PdH to β -PdH, and the suppression of CO and H 2 formation. The present study confers a desired catalyst design principle, introducing positive charges into Pd-based electrocatalyst to enable efficient and stable CO 2 to formate conversion.

Funder

Agency for Science, Technology and Research

National Research Foundation Singapore

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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