M/BiOCl-(M = Pt, Pd, and Au) Boosted Selective Photocatalytic CO 2 Reduction to C 2 Hydrocarbons via CHO Intermediate Manipulation

Selective CO photoreduction to C hydrocarbons is significant but limited by the inadequate adsorption strength of the reaction intermediates and low efficiency of proton transfer. Herein, an ameliorative *CO adsorption and H O activation strategy is realized via decorating bismuth oxychloride (BiOCl...

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Veröffentlicht in:Advanced science 2024-07, p.e2400934
Hauptverfasser: Liu, Qiong, Bai, Chengbo, Zhu, Chengxin, Guo, Wenjin, Li, Guangfang, Guo, Sheng, Kripalani, Devesh, Zhou, Kun, Chen, Rong
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Selective CO photoreduction to C hydrocarbons is significant but limited by the inadequate adsorption strength of the reaction intermediates and low efficiency of proton transfer. Herein, an ameliorative *CO adsorption and H O activation strategy is realized via decorating bismuth oxychloride (BiOCl) nanostructures with different metal (Pt, Pd, and Au) species. Experimental and theoretical calculation results reveal that distinct *CO binding energies and *H acquisition abilities of the metal cocatalysts mediate the CO reduction activity and hydrocarbon selectivity. The relatively moderate *CO adsorption and *H supply over Pd/BiOCl endows it with the lowest free energy to generate *CHO, leading to its highest activity of hydrocarbon production. Specifically, the Pt cocatalyst can efficiently participate in H O dissociation to deliver more *H for facilitating the protonation of the *CHO and *CHOH, thereby favoring CH production with 76.51% selectivity. A lower *H supply over Pd/BiOCl and Au/BiOCl results in a large energy barrier for *CHO or *CHOH protonation and thus a more thermodynamically favored OC─CHO coupling pathway, which endows them with vastly increased C hydrocarbon selectivity of 81.21% and 92.81%, respectively. The understanding of efficient C hydrocarbon production in this study sheds light on how materials can be engineered for photocatalytic CO reduction.
ISSN:2198-3844
2198-3844
DOI:10.1002/advs.202400934