101. Stabilizing Undercoordinated Zn Active Sites through Confinement in CeO 2 Nanotubes for Efficient Electrochemical CO 2 Reduction.
- Author
-
Guo ST, Du YW, Luo H, Zhu Z, Ouyang T, and Liu ZQ
- Abstract
Zn-based catalysts hold great potential to replace the noble metal-based ones for CO
2 reduction reaction (CO2 RR). Undercoordinated Zn (Znδ+ ) sites may serve as the active sites for enhanced CO production by optimizing the binding energy of *COOH intermediates. However, there is relatively less exploration into the dynamic evolution and stability of Znδ+ sites during CO2 reduction process. Herein, we present ZnO, Znδ+ /ZnO and Zn as catalysts by varying the applied reduction potential. Theoretical studies reveal that Znδ+ sites could suppress HER and HCOOH production to induce CO generation. And Znδ+ /ZnO presents the highest CO selectivity (FECO 70.9 % at -1.48 V vs. RHE) compared to Zn and ZnO. Furthermore, we propose a CeO2 nanotube with confinement effect and Ce3+ /Ce4+ redox to stabilize Znδ+ species. The hollow core-shell structure of the Znδ+ /ZnO/CeO2 catalyst enables to extremely expose electrochemically active area while maintaining the Znδ+ sites with long-time stability. Certainly, the target catalyst affords a FECO of 76.9 % at -1.08 V vs. RHE and no significant decay of CO selectivity in excess of 18 h., (© 2023 Wiley-VCH GmbH.)- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF