Publication | Open Access
Understanding activity and selectivity of metal-nitrogen-doped carbon catalysts for electrochemical reduction of CO2
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Citations
62
References
2017
Year
Direct electrochemical reduction of CO<sub>2</sub> to fuels and chemicals using renewable electricity has attracted significant attention partly due to the fundamental challenges related to reactivity and selectivity, and partly due to its importance for industrial CO<sub>2</sub>-consuming gas diffusion cathodes. Here, we present advances in the understanding of trends in the CO<sub>2</sub> to CO electrocatalysis of metal- and nitrogen-doped porous carbons containing catalytically active M-N <sub>x</sub> moieties (M = Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu). We investigate their intrinsic catalytic reactivity, CO turnover frequencies, CO faradaic efficiencies and demonstrate that Fe-N-C and especially Ni-N-C catalysts rival Au- and Ag-based catalysts. We model the catalytically active M-N <sub>x</sub> moieties using density functional theory and correlate the theoretical binding energies with the experiments to give reactivity-selectivity descriptors. This gives an atomic-scale mechanistic understanding of potential-dependent CO and hydrocarbon selectivity from the M-N <sub>x</sub> moieties and it provides predictive guidelines for the rational design of selective carbon-based CO<sub>2</sub> reduction catalysts.Inexpensive and selective electrocatalysts for CO<sub>2</sub> reduction hold promise for sustainable fuel production. Here, the authors report N-coordinated, non-noble metal-doped porous carbons as efficient and selective electrocatalysts for CO<sub>2</sub> to CO conversion.
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