Strong effect-correlated electrochemical CO 2 reduction.
Yu-Feng TangLin-Bo LiuMulin YuShuo LiuPeng-Fei SuiWei SunXian-Zhu FuJing-Li LuoSubiao LiuPublished in: Chemical Society reviews (2024)
Electrochemical CO 2 reduction (ECR) holds great potential to alleviate the greenhouse effect and our dependence on fossil fuels by integrating renewable energy for the electrosynthesis of high-value fuels from CO 2 . However, the high thermodynamic energy barrier, sluggish reaction kinetics, inadequate CO 2 conversion rate, poor selectivity for the target product, and rapid electrocatalyst degradation severely limit its further industrial-scale application. Although numerous strategies have been proposed to enhance ECR performances from various perspectives, scattered studies fail to comprehensively elucidate the underlying effect-performance relationships toward ECR. Thus, this review presents a comparative summary and a deep discussion with respect to the effects strongly-correlated with ECR, including intrinsic effects of materials caused by various sizes, shapes, compositions, defects, interfaces, and ligands; structure-induced effects derived from diverse confinements, strains, and fields; electrolyte effects introduced by different solutes, solvents, cations, and anions; and environment effects induced by distinct ionomers, pressures, temperatures, gas impurities, and flow rates, with an emphasis on elaborating how these effects shape ECR electrocatalytic activities and selectivity and the underlying mechanisms. In addition, the challenges and prospects behind different effects resulting from various factors are suggested to inspire more attention towards high-throughput theoretical calculations and in situ / operando techniques to unlock the essence of enhanced ECR performance and realize its ultimate application.