Litcius/Paper detail

Intrinsic Electron Transfer in Heteronuclear Dual‐Atom Sites Facilitates Selective Electrocatalytic Carbon Dioxide Reduction

Qi Tang, Qi Hao, Qian Zhu, Junxiu Wu, Keke Huang, Kai Liu, Jun Lü

2024Advanced Energy Materials24 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract The metal–metal (M 1 –M 2 ) interactions in heteronuclear dual‐atom catalysts (HNDACs) significantly optimize the electronic properties of the active sites, resulting in the promotion of the reaction kinetics in electrocatalysis. However, the regulation mechanisms in these M 1 –M 2 dual‐atom sites still remain unclear. Herein, the intrinsic electron transfer in Fe–Zn dual‐atom sites are revealed for facilitating electrocatalytic carbon dioxide reduction (ECO 2 R) to carbon monoxide (CO). The electronegativity difference between the Fe and Zn centers induces the specific electron transfer from Zn to Fe, which regulates the electron structures of the active Zn sites, leading to the optimized reaction pathway of CO 2 ‐to‐CO conversion on these sites. The Fe–Zn HNDAC (FeZnNC) exhibits superior ECO 2 R performances than the single‐atom Fe/Zn catalysts (FeNC and ZnNC) in the typical H‐cell system, the maximum CO partial current density on FeZnNC reaches more than 3.3 and 1.8 folds of those on FeNC and ZnNC, respectively. More importantly, in a strongly acidic medium (pH = 1), FeZnNC achieves CO Faradaic efficiencies greater than 94% in the current density range of 100–400 mA cm −2 . This work uncovers the intrinsic electron transfer at the heteronuclear diatomic sites, providing new insights for the rational design of high‐performance HNDACs toward industrial electrocatalysis.

Topics & Concepts

Heteronuclear moleculeMaterials scienceElectron transferCarbon dioxideAtom (system on chip)Dual (grammatical number)Reduction (mathematics)Electrochemical reduction of carbon dioxideElectrocatalystElectronChemical physicsPhotochemistryNanotechnologyNuclear magnetic resonanceElectrodeCatalysisPhysical chemistryElectrochemistryOrganic chemistryCarbon monoxideNuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopyPhysicsChemistryComputer scienceGeometryEmbedded systemArtQuantum mechanicsLiteratureMathematicsCO2 Reduction Techniques and CatalystsIonic liquids properties and applicationsElectrocatalysts for Energy Conversion