Cu Based Dilute Alloys for Tuning the C 2+ Selectivity of Electrochemical CO 2 Reduction.
Bradie S CrandallZhen QiAlexandre C FoucherStephen E WeitznerSneha A AkhadeXin LiuAjay R KashiAya K BuckleySichao MaEric A StachJoel B VarleyFeng JiaoJuergen BienerPublished in: Small (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2024)
Electrochemical CO 2 reduction is a promising technology for replacing fossil fuel feedstocks in the chemical industry but further improvements in catalyst selectivity need to be made. So far, only copper-based catalysts have shown efficient conversion of CO 2 into the desired multi-carbon (C 2+ ) products. This work explores Cu-based dilute alloys to systematically tune the energy landscape of CO 2 electrolysis toward C 2+ products. Selection of the dilute alloy components is guided by grand canonical density functional theory simulations using the calculated binding energies of the reaction intermediates CO*, CHO*, and OCCO* dimer as descriptors for the selectivity toward C 2+ products. A physical vapor deposition catalyst testing platform is employed to isolate the effect of alloy composition on the C 2+ /C 1 product branching ratio without interference from catalyst morphology or catalyst integration. Six dilute alloy catalysts are prepared and tested with respect to their C 2+ /C 1 product ratio using different electrolyzer environments including selected tests in a 100-cm 2 electrolyzer. Consistent with theory, CuAl, CuB, CuGa and especially CuSc show increased selectivity toward C 2+ products by making CO dimerization energetically more favorable on the dominant Cu facets, demonstrating the power of using the dilute alloy approach to tune the selectivity of CO 2 electrolysis.