Tailoring the Surface and Interface Structures of Copper-Based Catalysts for Electrochemical Reduction of CO 2 to Ethylene and Ethanol.
Ziyang ZhangLei BianHao TianYuan LiuYoshio BandoYusuke YamauchiZhong-Li WangPublished in: Small (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2022)
Electrochemical CO 2 reduction to valuable ethylene and ethanol offers a promising strategy to lower CO 2 emissions while storing renewable electricity. Cu-based catalysts have shown the potential for CO 2 -to-ethylene/ethanol conversion, but still suffer from low activity and selectivity. Herein, the effects of surface and interface structures in Cu-based catalysts for CO 2 -to-ethylene/ethanol production are systematically discussed. Both reactions involve three crucial steps: formation of CO intermediate, CC coupling, and hydrodeoxygenation of C 2 intermediates. For ethylene, the key step is CC coupling, which can be enhanced by tailoring the surface structures of catalyst such as step sites on facets, Cu 0 /Cu δ+ species and nanopores, as well as the optimized molecule-catalyst and electrolyte-catalyst interfaces further promoting the higher ethylene production. While the controllable hydrodeoxygenation of C 2 intermediate is important for ethanol, which can be achieved by tuning the stability of oxygenate intermediates through the metallic cluster induced special atomic configuration and bimetallic synergy induced the double active sites on catalyst surface. Additionally, constraining CO coverage by the complex-catalyst interface and stabilizing CO bond by N-doped carbon/Cu interface can also enhance the ethanol selectivity. The structure-performance relationships will provide the guidance for the design of Cu-based catalysts for highly efficient reduction of CO 2 .