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Enhanced CO 2 Reactive Capture and Conversion Using Aminothiolate Ligand-Metal Interface.

Mingyu WanZhengyang YangHeba MorganJinquan ShiFan ShiMengxia LiuHsi-Wu WongZhiyong GuFanglin Che
Published in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2023)
Metallic catalyst modification by organic ligands is an emerging catalyst design in enhancing the activity and selectivity of electrocatalytic carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) reactive capture and reduction to value-added fuels. However, a lack of fundamental science on how these ligand-metal interfaces interact with CO 2 and key intermediates under working conditions has resulted in a trial-and-error approach for experimental designs. With the aid of density functional theory calculations, we provided a comprehensive mechanism study of CO 2 reduction to multicarbon products over aminothiolate-coated copper (Cu) catalysts. Our results indicate that the CO 2 reduction performance was closely related to the alkyl chain length, ligand coverage, ligand configuration, and Cu facet. The aminothiolate ligand-Cu interface significantly promoted initial CO 2 activation and lowered the activation barrier of carbon-carbon coupling through the organic (nitrogen (N)) and inorganic (Cu) interfacial active sites. Experimentally, the selectivity and partial current density of the multicarbon products over aminothiolate-coated Cu increased by 1.5-fold and 2-fold, respectively, as compared to the pristine Cu at -1.16 V RHE , consistent with our theoretical findings. This work highlights the promising strategy of designing the ligand-metal interface for CO 2 reactive capture and conversion to multicarbon products.
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