Unraveling the Cooperative Mechanisms in Ultralow Copper-Loaded WC@NGC for Enhanced CO<sub>2</sub> Electroreduction to Acetic Acid
Debabrata Bagchi, Mohd Riyaz, Jithu Raj, Soumyabrata Roy, Ashutosh Kumar Singh, Arjun Cherevotan, C. P. Vinod, Sebastian C. Peter
Abstract
Electrochemical CO 2 reduction reaction (eCO 2 RR) has been explored on tungsten carbide (WC) nanoparticles embedded on N-doped graphitic carbon (NGC), demonstrating excellent activity toward the formation of acetic acid at an extremely lower potential. The activity has been further enhanced by loading ultralow copper sites into the catalyst system, exhibiting 80.02% Faradaic efficiency (FE) toward acetic acid at an applied potential of −0.3 V (vs RHE). Potential-dependent in situ infrared (IR), X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), Raman spectroscopy, ex situ extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) studies, and computational analysis confirm that synergy between uniformly dispersed Cu atoms and WC lattice plays a crucial role in the formation of acetic acid with high FE at a lower potential. It has been observed that the W atom of WC strongly chemisorbs CO 2 with a significant change in the C–O bond length and the O–C–O bond angle, in contrast to weaker adsorption on Cu-based catalyst surfaces. The presence of a Cu site enhances the adsorption of CO 2, thereby increasing the possibility of C–C coupling kinetically. Most importantly, hydrogen evolution predominates on the catalyst’s surface at higher applied potentials (−0.5 to −1.1 V vs RHE), elucidating the mechanism underlying enhanced charge transfer between copper and WC, a phenomenon ascertained through in situ IR spectroscopy and ex situ XPS analysis