Litcius/Paper detail

Atomic Coordination Engineering of Sub‐Nanometer Cu Clusters for Selective CO <sub>2</sub> Electroreduction to Multi‐Carbon Alcohols

Qingfeng Hua, Guang Feng, Lina Su, An Zhang, Wei Zhai, Yanan Yang, Jiayao Li, Mingrui Luo, Hao Mei, Hao Tian, Zhiqi Huang

2025Angewandte Chemie International Edition10 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract Electrochemical conversion of CO 2 to multi‐carbon (C 2+ ) alcohols remains a substantial challenge due to the competing ethylene pathway. Precisely tuning the bond energy of key intermediates plays an essential role in dictating the alcohol and ethylene pathway. Herein, we demonstrate that S and N coordinated Cu sub‐nanometer clusters (Cu/SNC) can achieve targeted modulation of the bond energy (Cu─C, C─O, and Cu─O) of multiple key intermediates (*CO and *OCHCH 2 ), thus leading to preferential production of C 2+ alcohols rather than ethylene. Notably, Cu/SNC exhibited a C 2+ alcohols selectivity of 59.1% and a high alcohol‐to‐ethylene ratio of 7.21, which is 19 times larger than that without S and N coordination. Mechanistic studies reveal that N and S dopants individually facilitate CO 2 activation and lower the *CO adsorption energy barrier, synergistically steering the asymmetric C─C coupling pathway to promote C 2+ species formation. Moreover, N and S co‐coordination enables precise modulation of the adsorption behavior of oxygen‐containing intermediates. This electronic restructuring weakens Cu─O interactions while strengthening the C─O bond, thereby preferentially stabilizing alcohol‐forming pathways. This work provides a framework for precisely regulating the reaction pathway toward the highly selective electroreduction of CO 2 to C 2+ alcohols.

Topics & Concepts

ChemistrySelectivityElectrochemistryAdsorptionEthyleneCoupling (piping)AlcoholMetalCatalysisDopantBond cleavageWork (physics)Combinatorial chemistryStereochemistryReaction intermediateCopperReaction mechanismSelective adsorptionModulation (music)NanotechnologyTransition metalCO2 Reduction Techniques and CatalystsIonic liquids properties and applicationsCarbon dioxide utilization in catalysis