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Dynamic Evolution of Copper Nanowires during CO<sub>2</sub> Reduction Probed by <i>Operando</i> Electrochemical 4D-STEM and X-ray Spectroscopy

Yao Yang, Chuqiao Shi, Julian Feijóo, Jianbo Jin, Chubai Chen, Yimo Han, Peidong Yang

2024Journal of the American Chemical Society60 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Nanowires have emerged as an important family of one-dimensional (1D) nanomaterials owing to their exceptional optical, electrical, and chemical properties. In particular, Cu nanowires (NWs) show promising applications in catalyzing the challenging electrochemical CO 2 reduction reaction (CO 2 RR) to valuable chemical fuels. Despite early reports showing morphological changes of Cu NWs after CO 2 RR processes, their structural evolution and the resulting exact nature of active Cu sites remain largely elusive, which calls for the development of multimodal operando time-resolved nm-scale methods. Here, we report that well-defined 1D copper nanowires, with a diameter of around 30 nm, have a metallic 5-fold twinned Cu core and around 4 nm Cu 2 O shell. Operando electrochemical liquid-cell scanning transmission electron microscopy (EC-STEM) showed that as-synthesized Cu@Cu 2 O NWs experienced electroreduction of surface Cu 2 O to disordered (spongy) metallic Cu shell (Cu@Cu S NWs) under CO 2 RR relevant conditions. Cu@Cu S NWs further underwent a CO-driven Cu migration leading to a complete evolution to polycrystalline metallic Cu nanograins. Operando electrochemical four-dimensional (4D) STEM in liquid, assisted by machine learning, interrogates the complex structures of Cu nanograin boundaries. Correlative operando synchrotron-based high-energy-resolution X-ray absorption spectroscopy unambiguously probes the electroreduction of Cu@Cu 2 O to fully metallic Cu nanograins followed by partial reoxidation of surface Cu during postelectrolysis air exposure. This study shows that Cu nanowires evolve into completely different metallic Cu nanograin structures supporting the operando (operating) active sites for the CO 2 RR.

Topics & Concepts

ChemistryNanowireCopperElectrochemistrySpectroscopyChemical reductionX-ray photoelectron spectroscopyReduction (mathematics)X-ray spectroscopyInorganic chemistryNanotechnologyChemical engineeringPhysical chemistryElectrodeOrganic chemistryPhysicsMathematicsEngineeringGeometryMaterials scienceQuantum mechanicsCO2 Reduction Techniques and CatalystsAdvanced Thermoelectric Materials and DevicesElectronic and Structural Properties of Oxides