Affiliation:
1. Laboratory of Advanced Materials Department of Chemistry and Shanghai Key Laboratory of Molecular Catalysis and Innovative Materials Fudan University Shanghai 200438 China
2. Henan Engineering Center of New Energy Battery Materials Henan D&A Engineering Center of Advanced Battery Materials College of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering Shangqiu Normal University Shangqiu 476000 China
3. Canadian Light Source Inc. University of Saskatchewan Saskatoon SK S7N 2V3 Canada
4. Department of Chemistry University of Western Ontario London ON N6A 5B7 Canada
Abstract
AbstractThe electrochemical CO2 reduction to CH4 has been extensively demonstrated, but still suffers from relatively poor activity and requires high overpotentials especially at large electrolysis rates. Perovskite oxides (AxByO) are one type of promising electrocatalyst for the CO2 reduction due to their tunable electronic structures. In this work, a Ca2CuO3 perovskite oxide catalyst is developed with alkaline‐earth A‐sites, featuring an inherently strong basic strengthand outstanding capability for CO2 adsorption, as well as the undercoordinated Cu sites generated through partial surface Ca2+ cation leaching. The Ca2CuO3 catalyst exhibitsa high partial current density of 517 ± 23 mA cm−2 for producing CH4 at a low applied potential of −0.30 V versus reversible hydrogen electrode, which further reached to a peak value of 1452 ± 156 mA cm−2. Density functional calculations show that the undercoordinated Cu sites allowed to promote the hydrogenation of *CO and subsequent *CHO intermediates, thus leading to the high CH4 activity. This work suggests an attractive design strategy for tuning the A‐sites in perovskite oxides to realize high‐rate CO2‐to‐CH4 electrosynthesis with low overpotentials.
Funder
National Key Research and Development Program of China
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Science and Technology Commission of Shanghai Municipality
Shanghai Municipal Education Commission
University of Saskatchewan
National Research Council
Canadian Institutes of Health Research
Subject
General Materials Science,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment
Cited by
8 articles.
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