Publication | Open Access
Phosphine‐Triggered Structural Defects in Au<sub>44</sub> Homologues Boost Electrocatalytic CO<sub>2</sub> Reduction
33
Citations
48
References
2023
Year
The systematic induction of structural defects at the atomic level is crucial to metal nanocluster research because it endows cluster-based catalysts with highly reactive centers and allows for a comprehensive investigation of viable reaction pathways. Herein, by substituting neutral phosphine ligands for surface anionic thiolate ligands, we establish that one or two Au<sub>3</sub> triangular units can be successfully introduced into the double-stranded helical kernel of Au<sub>44</sub> (TBBT)<sub>28</sub> , where TBBT=4-tert-butylbenzenethiolate, resulting in the formation of two atomically precise defective Au<sub>44</sub> nanoclusters. Along with the regular face-centered-cubic (fcc) nanocluster, the first series of mixed-ligand cluster homologues is identified, with a unified formula of Au<sub>44</sub> (PPh<sub>3</sub> )<sub>n</sub> (TBBT)<sub>28-2n</sub> (n=0-2). The Au<sub>44</sub> (PPh<sub>3</sub> )(TBBT)<sub>26</sub> nanocluster having major structural defects at the bottom of the fcc lattice demonstrates superior electrocatalytic performance in the CO<sub>2</sub> reduction to CO. Density functional theory calculations indicate that the active site near the defects significantly lowers the free energy for the *COOH formation, the rate-determining step in the whole catalytic process.
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