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1.
ACS Catal ; 14(11): 8353-8365, 2024 Jun 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38868105

ABSTRACT

Electrochemical CO2 reduction (CO2R) to formate is an attractive carbon emissions mitigation strategy due to the existing market and attractive price for formic acid. Tin is an effective electrocatalyst for CO2R to formate, but the underlying reaction mechanism and whether the active phase of tin is metallic or oxidized during reduction is openly debated. In this report, we used grand-canonical density functional theory and attenuated total reflection surface-enhanced infrared absorption spectroscopy to identify differences in the vibrational signatures of surface species during CO2R on fully metallic and oxidized tin surfaces. Our results show that CO2R is feasible on both metallic and oxidized tin. We propose that the key difference between each surface termination is that CO2R catalyzed by metallic tin surfaces is limited by the electrochemical activation of CO2, whereas CO2R catalyzed by oxidized tin surfaces is limited by the slow reductive desorption of formate. While the exact degree of oxidation of tin surfaces during CO2R is unlikely to be either fully metallic or fully oxidized, this study highlights the limiting behavior of these two surfaces and lays out the key features of each that our results predict will promote rapid CO2R catalysis. Additionally, we highlight the power of integrating high-fidelity quantum mechanical modeling and spectroscopic measurements to elucidate intricate electrocatalytic reaction pathways.

2.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 60(14): 7735-7743, 2021 Mar 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33403732

ABSTRACT

H2 adsorption on Au catalysts is weak and reversible, making it difficult to quantitatively study. We demonstrate H2 adsorption on Au/TiO2 catalysts results in electron transfer to the support, inducing shifts in the FTIR background. This broad background absorbance (BBA) signal is used to quantify H2 adsorption; adsorption equilibrium constants are comparable to volumetric adsorption measurements. H2 adsorption kinetics measured with the BBA show a lower Eapp value (23 kJ mol-1 ) for H2 adsorption than previously reported from proxy H/D exchange (33 kJ mol-1 ). We also identify a previously unreported H-O-H bending vibration associated with proton adsorption on electronically distinct Ti-OH metal-support interface sites, providing new insight into the nature and dynamics of H2 adsorption at the Au/TiO2 interface.

3.
J Am Chem Soc ; 142(12): 5760-5772, 2020 Mar 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32083865

ABSTRACT

Understanding the dynamic changes at the active site during catalysis is a fundamental challenge that promises to improve catalytic properties. While performing Arrhenius studies during H2 oxidation over Au/TiO2 catalysts, we found different apparent activation energies (Eapp) depending on the feedwater pressure. This is partially attributed to changing numbers of metal-support interface (MSI) sites as water coverage changes with temperature. Constant water coverage studies showed two kinetic regimes: fast heterolytic H2 activation directly at the MSI (Eapp ∼ 25 kJ/mol) and significantly slower heterolytic H2 activation mediated by water (Eapp ∼ 45 kJ/mol). The two regimes had significantly different kinetics, suggesting a complicated mechanism of water poisoning. Density functional theory (DFT) showed water has minor effects on the reaction thermodynamics, primarily attributable to intrinsic differences in surface reactivity of different Au sites in the DFT model. The DFT model suggested significant surface restructuring of the TiO2 support during heterolytic H2 adsorption; evidence for this phenomenon was observed during in situ infrared spectroscopy experiments. A monolayer of water on the hydroxylated TiO2 surface increased the H2 dissociation activation barrier by ∼0.2 eV, in good agreement the difference in experimentally measured values. DFT calculations suggested H2 activation goes through a proton-coupled electron-transfer-like mechanism. During proton transfer to a basic support hydroxyl group, electron density is distributed through the gold nanorod and partially localized on the protonated support hydroxyl group. Water slows H2 activation by slowing this H+ transfer, forcing negative charge buildup on the Au and increasing the transition state energy.

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