Atomically Dispersed NiN 3 Sites on Highly Defective Micro-Mesoporous Carbon for Superior CO 2 Electroreduction.
Xianzhang FuPianpian ZhangTingting SunLianbin XuLei GongBaotong ChenQingmei XuTianyu ZhengZonghua YuXin ChenShaolong ZhangMinchen HouHailong WangKang WangJianzhuang JiangPublished in: Small (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2022)
Direct electrochemical conversion of CO 2 to CO product powered by renewable electricity is widely advocated as an emerging strategy for alleviating CO 2 emissions while addressing global energy issues. However, the development of low-cost and efficient electrocatalysts with high Faradaic efficiency for CO production (FE CO ) and high current density remains a grand challenge. Herein, a robust single nickel atomic site electrocatalyst, which features isolated and dense single atomic NiN 3 sites anchored on highly defective hierarchically micro-mesoporous carbon (Ni-SAs/HMMNC-800), to enable enhanced charge transport and more exposed active sites for catalyzing electrochemical CO 2 -to-CO conversion, is reported. The Ni-SAs/HMMNC-800 catalyst achieves excellent activity and selectivity with high FE CO values of >90% throughout a wide potential range (the FE CO reaches 99.5% at -0.7 V vs reversible hydrogen electrode) and a CO partial current density as high as 13.0 mA cm -2 at -0.7 V versus reversible hydrogen electrode, as well as a far outstanding durability during long-term continuous operation, indicating a superior CO 2 electroreduction performance than that of other reference samples and most of previously reported carbon-based single atom electrocatalysts. Experimental and density functional theory calculations reveal that atomic NiN 3 coordination sites coupled adjacent defects are favorable to significantly enhancing the formation of COOH* reaction intermediates while suppressing the competing hydrogen evolution reaction, thereby enhancing the electrocatalytic activity for CO 2 -to-CO reduction. Notably, this work provides a valuable new prospect for designing and synthesizing efficient and cost-effective single atom CO 2 electroreduction catalysts for practical applications.