Photoelectrochemical CO 2 Reduction to CO Enabled by a Molecular Catalyst Attached to High-Surface-Area Porous Silicon.
Xiaofan JiaEleanor Stewart-JonesJose L Alvarez-HernandezGabriella P BeinJillian L DempseyCarrie L DonleyNilay HazariMadison N HouckMin LiJames M MayerHannah S NedzbalaRebecca E PowersPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2024)
A high-surface-area p -type porous Si photocathode containing a covalently immobilized molecular Re catalyst is highly selective for the photoelectrochemical conversion of CO 2 to CO. It gives Faradaic efficiencies of up to 90% for CO at potentials of -1.7 V (versus ferrocenium/ferrocene) under 1 sun illumination in an acetonitrile solution containing phenol. The photovoltage is approximately 300 mV based on comparisons with similar n -type porous Si cathodes in the dark. Using an estimate of the equilibrium potential for CO 2 reduction to CO under optimized reaction conditions, photoelectrolysis was performed at a small overpotential, and the onset of electrocatalysis in cyclic voltammograms occurred at a modest underpotential. The porous Si photoelectrode is more stable and selective for CO production than the photoelectrode generated by attaching the same Re catalyst to a planar Si wafer. Further, facile characterization of the porous Si-based photoelectrodes using transmission mode FTIR spectroscopy leads to highly reproducible catalytic performance.