Single-atom catalysts for CO2 electroreduction with significant activity and selectivity improvements

A single-atom catalyst (SAC) has an electronic structure that is very different from its bulk counterparts, and has shown an unexpectedly high specific activity with a significant reduction in noble metal usage for CO oxidation, fuel cell and hydrogen evolution applications, although physical origin...

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Veröffentlicht in:Chemical science (Cambridge) 2017-02, Vol.8 (2), p.1090-1096
Hauptverfasser: Back, Seoin, Lim, Juhyung, Kim, Na-Young, Kim, Yong-Hyun, Jung, Yousung
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Lim, Juhyung
Kim, Na-Young
Kim, Yong-Hyun
Jung, Yousung
description A single-atom catalyst (SAC) has an electronic structure that is very different from its bulk counterparts, and has shown an unexpectedly high specific activity with a significant reduction in noble metal usage for CO oxidation, fuel cell and hydrogen evolution applications, although physical origins of such performance enhancements are still poorly understood. Herein, by means of density functional theory (DFT) calculations, we for the first time investigate the great potential of single atom catalysts for CO2 electroreduction applications. In particular, we study a single transition metal atom anchored on defective graphene with single or double vacancies, denoted Mv-Gr or M sub(v)-Gr, where M = Ag, Au, Co, Cu, Fe, Ir, Ni, Os, Pd, Pt, Rh or Ru, as a CO2 reduction catalyst. Many SACs are indeed shown to be highly selective for the CO2 reduction reaction over a competitive H2 evolution reaction due to favorable adsorption of carboxyl (*COOH) or formate (*OCHO) over hydrogen (*H) on the catalysts. On the basis of free energy profiles, we identified several promising candidate materials for different products; Ni sub(v)-Gr (limiting potential UL = -0.41 V) and Pt sub(v)-Gr (-0.27 V) for CH3OH production, and Os sub(v)-Gr (-0.52 V) and Ru sub(v)-Gr (-0.52 V) for CH4 production. In particular, the Pt sub(v)-Gr catalyst shows remarkable reduction in the limiting potential for CH3OH production compared to any existing catalysts, synthesized or predicted. To understand the origin of the activity enhancement of SACs, we find that the lack of an atomic ensemble for adsorbate binding and the unique electronic structure of the single atom catalysts as well as orbital interaction play an important role, contributing to binding energies of SACs that deviate considerably from the conventional scaling relation of bulk transition metals.
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subjects Carbon dioxide
Catalysis
Catalysts
Constraining
Electronic structure
Graphene
Origins
Reduction (metal working)
title Single-atom catalysts for CO2 electroreduction with significant activity and selectivity improvements
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