Coordination of copper within a crystalline carbon nitride and its catalytic reduction of CO 2 .
Magnus PaulyEthan WhiteMawuli DeegbeyEmmanuel Adu FosuLandon KellerScott McGuiganGolnaz DianatEric GabilondoJian Cheng WongCorban G E MurpheyBo ShangHailiang WangJames F CahoonRenato SampaioYosuke KanaiGregory N ParsonsElena JakubikovaPaul A MaggardPublished in: Dalton transactions (Cambridge, England : 2003) (2024)
Inherently disordered structures of carbon nitrides have hindered an atomic level tunability and understanding of their catalytic reactivity. Starting from a crystalline carbon nitride, poly(triazine imide) or PTI/LiCl, the coordination of copper cations to its intralayer N -triazine groups was investigated using molten salt reactions. The reaction of PTI/LiCl within CuCl or eutectic KCl/CuCl 2 molten salt mixtures at 280 to 450 °C could be used to yield three partially disordered and ordered structures, wherein the Cu cations are found to coordinate within the intralayer cavities. Local structural differences and the copper content, i.e. , whether full or partial occupancy of the intralayer cavity occurs, were found to be dependent on the reaction temperature and Cu-containing salt. Crystallites of Cu-coordinated PTI were also found to electrophoretically deposit from aqueous particle suspensions onto either graphite or FTO electrodes. As a result, electrocatalytic current densities for the reduction of CO 2 and H 2 O reached as high as ∼10 to 50 mA cm -2 , and remained stable for >2 days. Selectivity for the reduction of CO 2 to CO vs . H 2 increases for thinner crystals as well as for when two Cu cations coordinate within the intralayer cavities of PTI. Mechanistic calculations have also revealed the electrocatalytic activity for CO 2 reduction requires a smaller thermodynamic driving force with two neighboring Cu atoms per cavity as compared to a single Cu atom. These results thus establish a useful synthetic pathway to metal-coordination in a crystalline carbon nitride and show great potential for mediating stable CO 2 reduction at sizable current densities.
Keyphrases
- ionic liquid
- room temperature
- metal organic framework
- aqueous solution
- reduced graphene oxide
- quantum dots
- molecular dynamics
- gold nanoparticles
- single cell
- molecular dynamics simulations
- climate change
- density functional theory
- single molecule
- visible light
- risk assessment
- atomic force microscopy
- monte carlo
- high speed