Selective CO2 electrocatalysis at the pseudocapacitive nanoparticle/ordered-ligand interlayer

Abstract: 

Enzymes feature the concerted operation of multiple components around an active site, leading to exquisite catalytic specificity. Realizing such configurations on synthetic catalyst surfaces remains elusive. Here, we report a nanoparticle/ordered-ligand interlayer that contains a multi-component catalytic pocket for high-specificity CO2 electrocatalysis. The nanoparticle/ordered-ligand interlayer comprises a metal nanoparticle surface and a detached layer of ligands in its vicinity. This interlayer possesses unique pseudocapacitive characteristics where desolvated cations are intercalated, creating an active-site configuration that enhances catalytic turnover by two orders and one order of magnitude against a pristine metal surface and nanoparticle with tethered ligands, respectively. The nanoparticle/ordered-ligand interlayer is demonstrated across several metals with up to 99% CO selectivity at marginal overpotentials and onset overpotentials of as low as 27 mV, in aqueous conditions. Furthermore, in a gas-diffusion environment with neutral media, the nanoparticle/ordered-ligand interlayer achieves nearly unit CO selectivity at high current densities (98.1% at 400 mA cm−2).

Author: 
Kim D
Yu S
Zheng F
Roh I
Li Y
Louisia S
Qi Z
Somorjai GA
Frei H
Wang L-W
Yang P
Publication date: 
November 30, 2020
Publication type: 
Journal Article