Potassium‐Assisted Fabrication of Intrinsic Defects in Porous Carbons for Electrocatalytic CO<sub>2</sub> Reduction
Li−Li Ling, Long Jiao, Xiaoshuo Liu, Yun Dong, Weijie Yang, Hongjun Zhang, Bangjiao Ye, Jun Chen, Hai‐Long Jiang
Abstract
Abstract The fabrication of intrinsic carbon defects is usually tangled with doping effects, and the identification of their unique roles in catalysis remains a tough task. Herein, a K + ‐assisted synthetic strategy is developed to afford porous carbon (K‐defect‐C) with abundant intrinsic defects and complete elimination of heteroatom via direct pyrolysis of K + ‐confined metal–organic frameworks (MOFs). Positron‐annihilation lifetime spectroscopy, X‐ray absorption fine structure measurement, and scanning transmission electron microscopy jointly illustrate the existence of abundant 12‐vacancy‐type carbon defects (V 12 ) in K‐defect‐C. Remarkably, the K‐defect‐C achieves ultrahigh CO Faradaic efficiency (99%) at −0.45 V in CO 2 electroreduction, far surpassing MOF‐derived carbon without K + etching. Theoretical calculations reveal that the V 12 defects in K‐defect‐C favor CO 2 adsorption and significantly accelerate the formation of the rate‐determining COOH* intermediate, thereby promoting CO 2 reduction. This work develops a novel strategy to generate intrinsic carbon defects and provides new insights into their critical role in catalysis.