Litcius/Paper detail

Progress and Perspective for In Situ Studies of CO<sub>2</sub> Reduction

Xiaodong Li, Shumin Wang, Li Li, Yongfu Sun, Yi Xie

2020Journal of the American Chemical Society194 citationsDOI

Abstract

CO2 conversion to chemical fuels through photoreduction, electroreduction, or thermoreduction is considered as one of the most effective methods to solve environmental pollution and energy shortage problems. However, recent studies show that the involved catalysts may undergo continuous reconstruction under realistic working conditions, which unfortunately causes controversial results concerning the active sites and reaction mechanism of CO2 reduction. Thus, it is necessary, while challenging, to monitor in real time the dynamic evolution of the catalysts and reaction intermediates by in situ techniques under experimental conditions. In this Perspective, we start with the working principle and detection modes of various in situ characterization techniques. Subsequently, we systematically summarize the recent developments of in situ studies on probing the catalyst evolution during the CO2 reduction process. We further focus on the progress of in situ studies in monitoring the reaction intermediates and catalytic products, in which we also highlight how the theoretical calculations are combined to reveal the reaction mechanism in detail. Finally, based on the achievements in the representative studies, we present some prospects and suggestions for in situ studies of CO2 reduction in the future.

Topics & Concepts

ChemistryIn situCatalysisEconomic shortageBiochemical engineeringReduction (mathematics)Reaction mechanismMechanism (biology)Characterization (materials science)Reaction intermediateNanotechnologyProcess engineeringPerspective (graphical)Process (computing)Computer scienceOrganic chemistryMaterials scienceEngineeringArtificial intelligencePhilosophyEpistemologyGeometryGovernment (linguistics)Operating systemMathematicsLinguisticsCO2 Reduction Techniques and CatalystsAdvanced Photocatalysis TechniquesCarbon dioxide utilization in catalysis