Publication: Electrocatalytic reduction of CO2 to produce higher alcohols
Program
KU Authors
Co-Authors
N/A
Advisor
Publication Date
2018
Language
English
Type
Journal Article
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Abstract
Electrodeposited and thermally oxidized copper surfaces have been documented in recent years to produce simple alcohols. In this work, we endeavored to study the electrochemical reduction of CO2 at different electrodes prepared via the electrodeposition method, namely, Cu-Cu2O, Cu-Cu2O-ZnO, and Cu-ZnO. In addition, thermally oxidized Cu (Cu-TO) was also investigated. C1, C2, and C3 species were produced on Cu-Cu2O-ZnO, Cu-Cu2O, and Cu-ZnO. The highest faradaic efficiency (FE of 97.4%) of the liquid products (methanol, formate, n-propanol, acetone) was evidenced on Cu-ZnO. The formation of C3 species with high FE on the Cu-ZnO electrode is attributed to the fast C-C-C coupling at the Cu-Zn interface. on thermally oxidized Cu, the total FE of the liquid products (methanol, formate, ethanol, acetate, n-propanol) was found to be 58.51%, which is considerably closer to the already reported values for these electrodes. Moreover, the Cu-Cu2O-ZnO electrode revealed selectivity toward methanol production. Detailed morphological and elemental analyses of the electrode, performed using XPS, Raman spectroscopy, and FESEM, as well as activity measurements to obtain an insight into the mechanistic pathways, reveal that C-C coupling is favored on Cu-0 sites rather than Cu2O. Moreover, methanol formation seems to proceed via O coordination of CO2 to Cu-Cu2O surface having (100) facets, whereas C coordination is favored on Cu-TO with (111) exposed faces, resulting in Cu-0 sites. The localized formation of ZnO nanoflowers was observed on Cu-ZnO electrodes after the electrochemical reduction of CO2, which is attributed to the mechanistic pathway involving chemical steps, leading to the formation of C3 species.
Description
Source:
Sustainable Energy and Fuels
Publisher:
Royal Soc Chemistry
Keywords:
Subject
Chemistry, Physical chemistry, Energy, Fuels, Materials Science