Universal Kinetic Mechanism Describing CO 2 Photoreductive Yield and Selectivity for Semiconducting Nanoparticle Photocatalysts.
Daniel James LundbergDorsa ParvizHyunah KimMaya LebowitzRuoxin LuMichael S StranoPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2022)
Photocatalytic conversion of CO 2 to generate high-value and renewable chemical fuels and feedstock presents a sustainable and renewable alternative to fossil fuels and petrochemicals. Currently, there is a dearth of kinetic understanding to inform better catalyst design, especially at uniform reaction conditions across diverse catalytic species. In this work, we investigate 12 active, stable, and unique but common nanoparticle photocatalysts for CO 2 reduction at room temperature and low partial pressure in aqueous phase: TiO 2 , SnO 2 , and SiC deposited with silver, gold, and platinum. Our analysis reveals a single consistent chemical kinetic mechanism, which accurately describes the yield and selectivity of all single-carbon containing (C1) products obtained in spite of the diverse catalysts employed. Formaldehyde is predicted as the first product in the reaction network and we report, to the best of our knowledge, the highest selectivity to date toward formaldehyde during CO 2 photoreduction when compared against all other C1 products (∼80%) albeit at low CO 2 conversion (<0.5 μmol g cat -1 h -1 , <16.8 nmol m -2 h -1 ). Further, we observe a volcano-like relationship between the electron-transfer rate of a given photocatalyst for CO 2 reduction and the net rate at which reduced products are produced in the reaction mixture taking into account unfavorable product oxidation. We establish an empirical upper limit for the maximum rate of production of CO 2 reduction products for any nanoparticle photocatalyst in the absence of a hole-scavenging agent. These results form the basis for the design and optimization of the next generation of highly efficiency and active photocatalysts for CO 2 reduction.