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Chemistry ; 28(25): e202200340, 2022 May 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35344228

RESUMO

Electrochemical reactors that electrolytically convert CO2 into higher-value chemicals and fuels often pass a concentrated hydroxide electrolyte across the cathode. This strongly alkaline medium converts the majority of CO2 into unreactive HCO3 - and CO3 2- byproducts rather than into CO2 reduction reaction (CO2RR) products. The electrolysis of CO (instead of CO2 ) does not suffer from this undesirable reaction chemistry because CO does not react with OH- . Moreover, CO can be more readily reduced into products containing two or more carbon atoms (i. e., C2+ products) compared to CO2 . We demonstrate here that an electrocatalyst layer derived from copper phthalocyanine (CuPc) mediates this conversion effectively in a flow cell. This catalyst achieved a 25 % higher selectivity for acetate formation at 200 mA/cm2 than a known state-of-art oxide-derived Cu catalyst tested in the same flow cell. A gas diffusion electrode coated with CuPc electrolyzed CO into C2+ products at high rates of product formation (i. e., current densities ≥200 mA/cm2 ), and at high faradaic efficiencies for C2+ production (FEC2+ ; >70 % at 200 mA/cm2 ). While operando Raman spectroscopy did not reveal evidence of structural changes to the copper molecular complex, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy suggests that the catalyst undergoes conversion to a metallic copper species during catalysis. Notwithstanding, the ligand environment about the metal still impacts catalysis, which we demonstrated through the study of a homologous CuPc bearing ethoxy substituents. These findings reveal new strategies for using metal complexes for the formation of carbon-neutral chemicals and fuels at industrially relevant conditions.

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