Litcius/Paper detail

Active and Selective Ensembles in Oxide-Derived Copper Catalysts for CO<sub>2</sub> Reduction

Federico Dattila, Rodrigo García‐Muelas, Núria López

2020ACS Energy Letters136 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Copper catalysts are unique in CO2 reduction as they allow the formation of C2+ products. Depending on the catalysts' synthesis, product distribution varies significantly: while Cu nanoparticles produce mainly methane and hydrogen, oxide-derived copper leads to ethylene and ethanol. Here, by means of ab initio molecular dynamics on oxygen-depleted models, we identified the ensembles controlling catalytic performance. Upon reconstruction and irrespective of the starting structure, recurrent patterns defined by their coordination and charges appear: metallic Cu0, polarized Cuδ+, and oxidic Cu+. These species combine to form 14 ensembles. Among them, 4-(6-)coordinated Cu adatoms and Cu3δ+O3 are responsible for tethering CO2, while metastable near-surface oxygens in fcc-(111) or (100)-like Cu domains promote C–C bond formation via glyoxylate species, thus triggering selective C2+ production at low onset potentials. Our work provides guidelines for modeling complex structural rearrangements under CO2 reduction conditions and devising new synthetic protocols toward an enhanced catalytic performance.

Topics & Concepts

CatalysisCopperMetastabilityOxideChemistryCopper oxideHydrogenMetalAb initioMolecular dynamicsChemical physicsInorganic chemistryComputational chemistryOrganic chemistryCO2 Reduction Techniques and CatalystsIonic liquids properties and applicationsCarbon dioxide utilization in catalysis