logo
ResearchBunny Logo
Turning copper into an efficient and stable CO evolution catalyst beyond noble metals

Chemistry

Turning copper into an efficient and stable CO evolution catalyst beyond noble metals

J. Xue, X. Dong, et al.

Experience the groundbreaking study by Jing Xue and colleagues, demonstrating a trimetallic single-atom alloy catalyst that achieves 100% CO selectivity for converting CO2 to CO with impressive stability and efficiency. This innovative research challenges traditional reliance on noble metals, paving the way for sustainable energy solutions.

00:00
00:00
~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Using renewable electricity to convert CO2 into CO offers a sustainable route to produce a versatile intermediate to synthesize various chemicals and fuels. For economic CO2-to-CO conversion at scale, however, there exists a trade-off between selectivity and activity, necessitating the delicate design of efficient catalysts to hit the sweet spot. We demonstrate here that copper co-alloyed with isolated antimony and palladium atoms can efficiently activate and convert CO2 molecules into CO. This trimetallic single-atom alloy catalyst (Cu92Sb5Pd3) achieves an outstanding CO selectivity of 100% (±1.5%) at -402 mA cm−2 and a high activity up to -1 A cm−2 in a neutral electrolyte, surpassing numerous state-of-the-art noble metal catalysts. Moreover, it exhibits long-term stability over 528 h at -100 mA cm−2 with an FECO above 95%. Operando spectroscopy and theoretical simulation provide explicit evidence for the charge redistribution between Sb/Pd additions and Cu base, demonstrating that Sb and Pd single atoms synergistically shift the electronic structure of Cu for CO production and suppress hydrogen evolution. Additionally, the collaborative interactions enhance the overall stability of the catalyst. These results showcase that Sb/Pd-doped Cu can steadily carry out efficient CO2 electrolysis under mild conditions, challenging the monopoly of noble metals in large-scale CO2-to-CO conversion.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Jul 17, 2024
Authors
Jing Xue, Xue Dong, Chunxiao Liu, Jiawei Li, Yizhou Dai, Weiqing Xue, Laihao Luo, Yuan Ji, Xiao Zhang, Xu Li, Qiu Jiang, Tingting Zheng, Jianping Xiao, Chuan Xia
Tags
CO2 reduction
single-atom alloy
catalyst
CO selectivity
Faradaic efficiency
sustainability
renewable energy
Listen, Learn & Level Up
Over 10,000 hours of research content in 25+ fields, available in 12+ languages.
No more digging through PDFs, just hit play and absorb the world's latest research in your language, on your time.
listen to research audio papers with researchbunny