Connecting Biological and Synthetic Approaches for Electrocatalytic CO2 Reduction

Author:

Cobb Samuel J.1ORCID,Rodríguez‐Jiménez Santiago1ORCID,Reisner Erwin1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Yusuf Hamied Department of Chemistry University of Cambridge Lensfield Road Cambridge CB2 1EW UK

Abstract

AbstractElectrocatalytic CO2 reduction has developed into a broad field, spanning fundamental studies of enzymatic ‘model’ catalysts to synthetic molecular catalysts and heterogeneous gas diffusion electrodes producing commercially relevant quantities of product. This diversification has resulted in apparent differences and a disconnect between seemingly related approaches when using different types of catalysts. Enzymes possess discrete and well understood active sites that can perform reactions with high selectivity and activities at their thermodynamic limit. Synthetic small molecule catalysts can be designed with desired active site composition but do not yet display enzyme‐like performance. These properties of the biological and small molecule catalysts contrast with heterogeneous materials, which can contain multiple, often poorly understood active sites with distinct reactivity and therefore introducing significant complexity in understanding their activities. As these systems are being better understood and the continuously improving performance of their heterogeneous active sites closes the gap with enzymatic activity, this performance difference between heterogeneous and enzymatic systems begins to close. This convergence removes the barriers between using different types of catalysts and future challenges can be addressed without multiple efforts as a unified picture for the biological‐synthetic catalyst spectrum emerges.

Funder

Leverhulme Trust

H2020 Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions

H2020 European Research Council

Isaac Newton Trust

Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Chemistry,Catalysis

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