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Hydronium-Induced Switching between CO2 Electroreduction Pathways.
Seifitokaldani, Ali; Gabardo, Christine M; Burdyny, Thomas; Dinh, Cao-Thang; Edwards, Jonathan P; Kibria, Md Golam; Bushuyev, Oleksandr S; Kelley, Shana O; Sinton, David; Sargent, Edward H.
Afiliación
  • Seifitokaldani A; Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering , University of Toronto , 35 St. George Street , Toronto , Ontario M5S 1A4 , Canada.
  • Gabardo CM; Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering , University of Toronto , 5 King's College Road , Toronto , Ontario M5S 3G8 , Canada.
  • Burdyny T; Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering , University of Toronto , 5 King's College Road , Toronto , Ontario M5S 3G8 , Canada.
  • Dinh CT; Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering , University of Toronto , 35 St. George Street , Toronto , Ontario M5S 1A4 , Canada.
  • Edwards JP; Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering , University of Toronto , 5 King's College Road , Toronto , Ontario M5S 3G8 , Canada.
  • Kibria MG; Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering , University of Toronto , 35 St. George Street , Toronto , Ontario M5S 1A4 , Canada.
  • Bushuyev OS; Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering , University of Toronto , 35 St. George Street , Toronto , Ontario M5S 1A4 , Canada.
  • Kelley SO; Department of Chemistry , University of Toronto , 80 St. George Street , Toronto , Ontario M5S 3G4 , Canada.
  • Sinton D; Department of Chemistry , University of Toronto , 80 St. George Street , Toronto , Ontario M5S 3G4 , Canada.
  • Sargent EH; Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences , University of Toronto , Leslie Dan Faculty of Pharmacy, 144 College Street , Toronto , Ontario M5S 3M2 , Canada.
J Am Chem Soc ; 140(11): 3833-3837, 2018 03 21.
Article en En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29504748
ABSTRACT
Over a broad range of operating conditions, many CO2 electroreduction catalysts can maintain selectivity toward certain reduction products, leading to materials and surfaces being categorized according to their products; here we ask, is product selectivity truly a property of the catalyst? Silver is among the best electrocatalysts for CO in aqueous electrolytes, where it reaches near-unity selectivity. We consider the hydrogenations of the oxygen and carbon atoms via the two proton-coupled-electron-transfer processes as chief determinants of product selectivity; and find using density functional theory (DFT) that the hydronium (H3O+) intermediate plays a key role in the first oxygen hydrogenation step and lowers the activation energy barrier for CO formation. When this hydronium influence is removed, the activation energy barrier for oxygen hydrogenation increases significantly, and the barrier for carbon hydrogenation is reduced. These effects make the formate reaction pathway more favorable than CO. Experimentally, we then carry out CO2 reduction in highly concentrated potassium hydroxide (KOH), limiting the hydronium concentration in the aqueous electrolyte. The product selectivity of a silver catalyst switches from entirely CO under neutral conditions to over 50% formate in the alkaline environment. The simulated and experimentally observed selectivity shift provides new insights into the role of hydronium on CO2 electroreduction processes and the ability for electrolyte manipulation to directly influence transition state (TS) kinetics, altering favored CO2 reaction pathways. We argue that selectivity should be considered less of an intrinsic catalyst property, and rather a combined product of the catalyst and reaction environment.

Texto completo: 1 Bases de datos: MEDLINE Idioma: En Revista: J Am Chem Soc Año: 2018 Tipo del documento: Article País de afiliación: Canadá

Texto completo: 1 Bases de datos: MEDLINE Idioma: En Revista: J Am Chem Soc Año: 2018 Tipo del documento: Article País de afiliación: Canadá