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1.
Acc Chem Res ; 55(14): 1900-1911, 2022 Jul 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35772054

ABSTRACT

ConspectusThe electrochemical reduction of CO2 (CO2RR) constitutes an alternative to fossil fuel-based technologies for the production of fuels and commodity chemicals. Yet the application of CO2RR electrolyzers is hampered by low energy and Faradaic efficiencies. Concomitant electrochemical reactions, like hydrogen evolution (HER), lower the selectivity, while the conversion of CO2 into (bi)carbonate through solution acid-base reactions induces an additional concentration overpotential. During CO2RR in aqueous media, the local pH becomes more alkaline than the bulk causing an additional consumption of CO2 by the homogeneous reactions. The latter effect, in combination with the low solubility of CO2 in aqueous electrolytes (33 mM), leads to a significant depletion in CO2 concentration at the electrode surface.The nature of the electrolyte, in terms of pH and cation identity, has recently emerged as an important factor to tune both the energy and Faradaic efficiency. In this Account, we summarize the recent advances in understanding electrolyte effects on CO2RR to CO in aqueous solutions, which is the first, and crucial, step to further reduced products. To compare literature findings in a meaningful way, we focus on results reported under well-defined mass transport conditions and using online analytical techniques. The discussion covers the molecular-level understanding of the effects of the proton donor, in terms of the suppression of the CO2 gradient vs enhancement of HER at a given mass transport rate and of the cation, which is crucial in enabling both CO2RR and HER. These mechanistic insights are then translated into possible implications for industrially relevant cell geometries and current densities.

2.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 24(4): 2022-2031, 2022 Jan 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34909813

ABSTRACT

Electrolyte buffering species have been shown to act as proton donors in the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER). Analogously, we study here whether these electrolyte species may participate in other reactions by investigating CO electrooxidation (COOR) on a gold rotating disk electrode. This model system, characterized by fast kinetics, exhibits a diffusion-limited regime, which helps in the identification of the species dictating the diffusion-limited current. Through a systematic concentration dependence study in a variety of buffers, we show that electrolyte buffering species act as oxygen donor shuttles in COOR, lowering the reaction overpotential. A similar correlation between electrolyte and electrocatalytic activity was observed for COOR on a different electrode material (Pt). Probing the electrode-electrolyte interface by attenuated total reflection infrared spectroscopy (ATR-FTIR) and modelling the surface speciation to include the effect of the solution reactions, we propose that the buffer conjugated base generates the oxygen donor (i.e. OH-) through its acid-base reaction with water.

3.
ACS Catal ; 11(9): 4936-4945, 2021 May 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34055454

ABSTRACT

The electrochemical reduction of CO2 aims to be a central technology to store excess electricity generated by wind and solar energy. However, the reaction is hindered by the competition with the hydrogen evolution reaction. In this paper, we present a detailed quantitative study of the Faradaic efficiency (FE) to CO on a gold electrode under well-defined mass-transport conditions using rotating ring-disk electrode voltammetry. Varying the concentration of the bicarbonate and the electrolyte cation employing different rotation rates, we map out how these parameters affect the FE(CO). We identify two different potential regimes for the electrolyte effects, characterized by a different dependence on the cation and bicarbonate concentrations. For hydrogen evolution, we analyze the nature of the proton donor for an increasingly negative potential, showing how it changes from carbonic acid to bicarbonate and to water. Our study gives detailed insights into the role of electrolyte composition and mass transport, and helps defining optimized electrolyte conditions for a high FE(CO).

4.
Langmuir ; 37(18): 5707-5716, 2021 May 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33913319

ABSTRACT

Among heterogeneous electrocatalysts, gold comes closest to the ideal reversible electrocatalysis of CO2 electrochemical reduction (CO2RR) to CO and, vice versa, of CO electroxidation to CO2 (COOR). The nature of the electrolyte has proven to crucially affect the electrocatalytic behavior of gold. Herein, we expand the understanding of the effect of the widely employed bicarbonate electrolytes on CO2RR using gold monocrystalline electrodes, detecting the CO evolved during CO2RR by selective anodic oxidation. First, we show that CO2RR to CO is facet dependent and that Au(110) is the most active surface. Additionally, we detect by in situ FTIR measurements the presence of adsorbed COtop only on the Au(110) surface. Second, we highlight the importance of acid-base equilibria for both CO2RR and COOR by varying the electrolyte (partial pressure of CO2 and the concentration of the bicarbonate) and voltammetric parameters. In this way, we identify different regimes of surface pH and bicarbonate speciation, as a function of the current and electrolyte conditions. We reveal the importance of the acid-base bicarbonate/carbonate couple, not only as a buffering equilibrium but also as species involved in the electrochemical reactions under study.

5.
J Am Chem Soc ; 142(9): 4154-4161, 2020 03 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32041410

ABSTRACT

Gold is one of the most selective catalysts for the electrochemical reduction of CO2 (CO2RR) to CO. However, the concomitant hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) remains unavoidable under aqueous conditions. In this work, a rotating ring disk electrode (RRDE) setup has been developed to study quantitatively the role of mass transport in the competition between these two reactions on the Au surface in 0.1 M bicarbonate electrolyte. Interestingly, while the faradaic selectivity for CO formation was found to increase with enhanced mass transport (from 67% to 83%), this effect is not due to an enhancement of the CO2RR rate. Remarkably, the inhibition of the competing HER from water reduction with increasing disk rotation rate is responsible for the enhanced CO2RR selectivity. This can be explained by the observation that, on the Au electrode, water reduction improves with more alkaline pH. As a result, the decrease in the local alkalinity near the electrode surface with enhanced mass transport suppresses HER due to the water reduction. Our study shows that controlling the local pH by mass transport conditions can tune the HER rate, in turn regulating the CO2RR and HER competition in the general operating potential window for CO2RR (-0.4 to -1 V vs RHE).

6.
J Am Chem Soc ; 139(45): 16412-16419, 2017 11 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29064691

ABSTRACT

The complexity of the electrocatalytic reduction of CO to CH4 and C2H4 on copper electrodes prevents a straightforward elucidation of the reaction mechanism and the design of new and better catalysts. Although structural and electrolyte effects have been separately studied, there are no reports on structure-sensitive cation effects on the catalyst's selectivity over a wide potential range. Therefore, we investigated CO reduction on Cu(100), Cu(111), and Cu(polycrystalline) electrodes in 0.1 M alkaline hydroxide electrolytes (LiOH, NaOH, KOH, RbOH, CsOH) between 0 and -1.5 V vs RHE. We used online electrochemical mass spectrometry and high-performance liquid chromatography to determine the product distribution as a function of electrode structure, cation size, and applied potential. First, cation effects are potential dependent, as larger cations increase the selectivity of all electrodes toward ethylene at E > -0.45 V vs RHE, but methane is favored at more negative potentials. Second, cation effects are structure-sensitive, as the onset potential for C2H4 formation depends on the electrode structure and cation size, whereas that for CH4 does not. Fourier Transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) and density functional theory help to understand how cations favor ethylene over methane at low overpotentials on Cu(100). The rate-determining step to methane and ethylene formation is CO hydrogenation, which is considerably easier in the presence of alkaline cations for a CO dimer compared to a CO monomer. For Li+ and Na+, the stabilization is such that hydrogenated dimers are observable with FTIR at low overpotentials. Thus, potential-dependent, structure-sensitive cation effects help steer the selectivity toward specific products.

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