Cooperative Effects Associated with High Electrolyte Concentrations in Driving the Conversion of CO2 to C2H4 on Copper: Article No. 101338

Shaoyang Lin, Yuval Fishler, Soonho Kwon, Annette Bohme, Weixuan Nie, Matthias Richter, Moon Yang, Jesse Matthews, Zachery Iton, Brian Lee, Thomas Jaramillo, Harry Atwater, William Goddard III, Wilson Smith, Kimberly See

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Compared to a conventional electrolyte concentration of 1 M HCOOK, the use of a highly concentrated 7.1 M HCOOK electrolyte increases the Faradaic efficiency (FE) ratio of C2H4/CO from 2.2 +- 0.3 to 18.3 +- 4.8 at -1.08 V vs. reversible hydrogen electrode (RHE) on a Cu gas-diffusion electrode. Based on electrochemical analysis and ab initio molecular dynamics (AIMD) simulation, the identity and concentration of the cation and anion play more important roles in controlling the CO2R reaction pathway than the bulk CO2 solubility and the bulk pH of electrolytes. In situ attenuated reflectance surface enhanced infrared absorption spectroscopy (ATR-SEIRAS) suggests that, unlike 1 M HCOOK, the *CO-bridge-binding mode on Cu is dominant in 7.1 M HCOOK electrolyte, which potentially results in less CO release and higher yield of C2H4. This study demonstrates that although we can tailor the electrolyte composition to shift product selectivity, the factors that control the product selectivity are numerous and cannot be distilled down into one correlated property-reactivity relationship.
Original languageAmerican English
JournalChem Catalysis
DOIs
StatePublished - 2025

NREL Publication Number

  • NREL/JA-5900-94447

Keywords

  • ab initio molecular dynamics
  • adsorbed intermediates
  • CO2 reduction
  • concentrated electrolyte
  • copper electrocatalysis
  • electrode-electrolyte microenvironment
  • grand canonical density functional theory
  • grand canonical scheme
  • product selectivity

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