Balancing *CHO/*CO Intermediate Flux via Carbonyl-Hydroxyl Motif Synergy Enables High-Selectivity Ethanol Electrosynthesis from Dilute CO<sub><b>2</b></sub>
Pu Huang, Zhilong Yang, Kewei Zhai, Binbin Huang, Jing Zhou, Xinyu Sun, Yamei Lin, Jing Xu, Chengsi Pan, Yuming Dong, Yao Wang, Ying Zhang, Yang Lou, Hongwen Huang, Yongfa Zhu, Jiawei Zhang
Abstract
The electrochemical CO 2 reduction reaction (CO 2 RR) to ethanol represents a sustainable avenue to close the carbon cycle and produce renewable fuels, yet challenges persist in achieving high selectivity and activity under industrially relevant dilute CO 2 streams. Herein, we realize an efficient ethanol electrosynthesis by coating Cu catalysts with β-hydroxy ketone-based covalent organic polymers (COP CO+OH ), which not only activate CO 2 but also balance the *CHO/*CO flux at the catalyst–electrolyte interface. The COP CO+OH coated Cu NPs (Cu+COP CO+OH ) exhibits unprecedented FE EtOH of 54.2% in 0.5 M KHCO 3, with a partial current density of 121.3 mA cm –2 . Crucially, using a dilute CO 2 feedstock (20% CO 2 ), it retains ∼40.8% FE EtOH, circumventing energy-intensive CO 2 purification. Through systematic experimental characterizations and density functional theory (DFT) calculations, we elucidate a unique organic motif synergy: carbonyl groups serve as CO 2 activation centers, while adjacent hydroxyl groups boost *H supply for *CO protonation to *CHO intermediates. This unique synergy enables a balanced *CHO/*CO flux, thereby creating an optimal environment favoring asymmetric *CHO–*CO coupling and preferentially stabilizing the *CHCOH intermediate toward ethanol production. Our investigations establish a universal design paradigm to bypass scaling relations in CO 2 RR through organic motif synergy, offering atomistic insights into steering complex reaction networks in CO 2 electroreduction.