Litcius/Paper detail

Atomically Dispersed Alkaline‐Earth Metals as Active Centers for CO<sub>2</sub> Electroreduction to Exclusively Produce Formate

Donghai Wu, Jiarui Wu, Peng Lv, Haobo Li, Ke Chu, Dongwei Ma

2023Small Structures49 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Electrocatalytic CO 2 reduction reaction (CO 2 RR) to produce formate (HCOOH) attracts special interest in the upgrade of waste CO 2 . For the selective CO 2 conversion into HCOOH, the preferable binding of *OCHO compared with *COOH is a prerequisite, which presents a great challenge to the rational design of the catalytic active center. Recently, alkaline‐earth (AE) metals as active centers have been reported for electrocatalysis. Herein, the feasibility of AE metals as active centers in heterogeneous catalysis for electrocatalytic CO 2 RR toward HCOOH based on a series of AE metal single‐atom catalysts (SACs) is theoretically studied. High‐throughput first‐principles calculations reveal that, for all the studied systems, the AE metal active centers preferably adsorb *OCHO, enabling exclusive HCOOH production. Especially, Mg SACs embedded in graphene and Ca SAC anchored in g‐C 2 N can efficiently convert CO 2 into HCOOH under near‐zero potential, and both systems exhibit high stability. Mechanistic investigation indicates that the AE metal active centers are highly ionic, which can strongly bind *OCHO mainly through the electrostatic attraction interaction. This study lays a theoretical foundation for the rational design of AE metal SACs for efficient CO 2 electroreduction with exclusive HCOOH selectivity, and further emphasizes the potential of AE metals as active centers in heterogeneous catalysis.

Topics & Concepts

CatalysisElectrocatalystFormateChemistryRational designActive centerBimetallic stripActive siteMetalInorganic chemistryIonic bondingAdsorptionPhotochemistryNanotechnologyMaterials sciencePhysical chemistryIonOrganic chemistryElectrodeElectrochemistryCO2 Reduction Techniques and CatalystsAmmonia Synthesis and Nitrogen ReductionIonic liquids properties and applications