JOURNAL ARTICLE

Temperature‐Dependent CO2 Electroreduction over Fe‐N‐C and Ni‐N‐C Single‐Atom Catalysts

Long LinHaobo LiYi WangHefei LiPengfei WeiBing NanRui SiGuoxiong WangXinhe Bao

Year: 2021 Journal:   Angewandte Chemie International Edition Vol: 60 (51)Pages: 26582-26586   Publisher: Wiley

Abstract

Abstract Reaction temperature is an important parameter to tune the selectivity and activity of electrochemical CO 2 reduction reaction (CO 2 RR) due to different thermodynamics of CO 2 RR and competitive hydrogen evolution reaction (HER). In this work, temperature‐dependent CO 2 RR over Fe‐N‐C and Ni‐N‐C single‐atom catalysts are investigated from 303 to 343 K. Increasing the reaction temperature improves and decreases CO Faradaic efficiency over Fe‐N‐C and Ni‐N‐C catalysts at high overpotentials, respectively. CO current density over Fe‐N‐C catalyst increases with temperature, then gets into a plateau at 323 K, finally reaches the maximum value of 185.8 mA cm −2 at 343 K. While CO current density over Ni‐N‐C catalyst achieves the maximum value of 252.5 mA cm −2 at 323 K, and then drops significantly to 202.9 mA cm −2 at 343 K. Temperature programmed desorption results and density functional theory calculations reveal that the difference of temperature‐dependent variation on CO Faradaic efficiency and current density between Fe‐N‐C and Ni‐N‐C catalysts results from the varied adsorption strength of key reaction intermediates during CO 2 RR.

Keywords:
Catalysis Faraday efficiency Selectivity Desorption Hydrogen Atom (system on chip) Electrochemistry Chemistry Exchange current density Adsorption Analytical Chemistry (journal) Density functional theory Reaction rate Physical chemistry Inorganic chemistry Materials science Computational chemistry Electrode Organic chemistry

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96
Cited By
3.75
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
38
Refs
0.94
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Citation History

Topics

CO2 Reduction Techniques and Catalysts
Physical Sciences →  Energy →  Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment
Electrocatalysts for Energy Conversion
Physical Sciences →  Energy →  Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment
Ionic liquids properties and applications
Physical Sciences →  Chemical Engineering →  Catalysis
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