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Engineered Spatial Confinement of Cu Single‐Atoms with Diagonal N─Cu─N Motifs for High‐Rate CO <sub>2</sub> Methanation

Guanghui Feng, Dashuai Wang, Libin Zeng, Wanzhen Zheng, Weixiao Lin, Xianyun Peng, Xiahan Sang, Bin Yang, Zhongjian Li, Yuanyuan Li, Lecheng Lei, Yang Hou

2025Angewandte Chemie International Edition15 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract The renewable‐electricity‐powered carbon dioxide reduction (eCO 2 R) to value‐added fuels and feedstocks like methane (CH 4 ) holds the sustainable and economically viable carbon cycle at meaningful scales. However, this kinetically challenging eight‐electron multistep deep‐reduction encounters insufficient catalyst design principles to steer complex CO 2 reduction pathways. Utilizing atomic copper (Cu) structures with unitary active sites can boost eCO 2 R‐to‐CH 4 selectivity due to the efficient suppression of unwanted C─C coupling. Herein, we report a sequential ion exchange strategy to fabricate periodic Cu single‐atom catalysts within a polymeric carbon nitride (PCN) matrix, where the uniformly dispersed, diagonally coordinated N─Cu─N configuration hosts low‐valent Cu δ+ centers. Leveraging the periodic N‐anchoring sites with delocalized π‐electron conjugation in the PCN matrix, the isolated Cu sites are obtained with an interatomic distance of ∼4.2 Å under high metal‐loading conditions. This engineered spatial configuration effectively inhibits C─C coupling to avoid subsequent multicarbon product formation. The optimized Cu 1 /PCN demonstrates exceptional eCO 2 R‐to‐CH 4 performance, achieving 71.1% CH 4 Faradaic efficiency with a high partial current density of 426.6 mA cm −2 at −1.50 V versus reversible hydrogen electrode, outpacing the state‐of‐the‐art catalysts. This work delves into effective concepts for steering desirable reaction pathways via precisely modulating active site structures at the atomic level to create favorable microenvironments.

Topics & Concepts

Faraday efficiencyMaterials scienceCatalysisCopperDelocalized electronChemical physicsNanotechnologyChemical engineeringChemistryElectrodeElectrochemistryPhysical chemistryMetallurgyEngineeringOrganic chemistryBiochemistryCO2 Reduction Techniques and CatalystsElectrocatalysts for Energy ConversionCatalytic Processes in Materials Science
Engineered Spatial Confinement of Cu Single‐Atoms with Diagonal N─Cu─N Motifs for High‐Rate CO <sub>2</sub> Methanation | Litcius