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Zn-induced electron-rich Sn catalysts enable highly efficient CO 2 electroreduction to formate.

Xingxing TanShunhan JiaXinning SongXiaodong MaJiaqi FengLibing ZhangLimin WuJuan DuAi-Bing ChenQinggong ZhuXiaofu SunHuizhen Liu
Published in: Chemical science (2023)
Renewable-energy-driven CO 2 electroreduction provides a promising way to address the growing greenhouse effect issue and produce value-added chemicals. As one of the bulk chemicals, formic acid/formate has the highest revenue per mole of electrons among various products. However, the scaling up of CO 2 -to-formate for practical applications with high faradaic efficiency (FE) and current density is constrained by the difficulty of precisely reconciling the competing intermediates (*COOH and HCOO*). Herein, a Zn-induced electron-rich Sn electrocatalyst was reported for CO 2 -to-formate with high efficiency. The faradaic efficiency of formate (FE formate ) could reach 96.6%, and FE formate > 90% was maintained at formate partial current density up to 625.4 mA cm -1 . Detailed study indicated that catalyst reconstruction occurred during electrolysis. With appropriate electron accumulation, the electron-rich Sn catalyst could facilitate the adsorption and activation of CO 2 molecules to form a intermediate and then promoted the carbon protonation of to yield a HCOO* intermediate. Afterwards, the HCOO* → HCOOH* proceeded via another proton-coupled electron transfer process, leading to high activity and selectivity for formate production.
Keyphrases
  • highly efficient
  • electron transfer
  • metal organic framework
  • high efficiency
  • high glucose
  • heavy metals
  • aqueous solution
  • oxidative stress
  • reduced graphene oxide
  • risk assessment
  • electron microscopy