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PdAg bimetallic electrocatalyst for highly selective reduction of CO2 with low COOH* formation energy and facile CO desorption

  • Rui Lin
  • , Xuelu Ma
  • , Weng Chon Cheong
  • , Chao Zhang
  • , Wei Zhu
  • , Jiajing Pei
  • , Kaiyue Zhang
  • , Bin Wang
  • , Shiyou Liang
  • , Yuxi Liu
  • , Zhongbin Zhuang
  • , Rong Yu
  • , Hai Xiao*
  • , Jun Li
  • , Dingsheng Wang
  • , Qing Peng
  • , Chen Chen
  • , Yadong Li
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • Tsinghua University
  • China University of Mining & Technology, Beijing
  • Beijing University of Chemical Technology
  • Beijing University of Technology
  • Beijing Research Institute of Coal Chemistry

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

For electrocatalytic reduction of CO2 to CO, the stabilization of intermediate COOH* and the desorption of CO* are two key steps. Pd can easily stabilize COOH*, whereas the strong CO* binding to Pd surface results in severe poisoning, thus lowering catalytic activity and stability for CO2 reduction. On Ag surface, CO* desorbs readily, while COOH* requires a relatively high formation energy, leading to a high overpotential. In light of the above issues, we successfully designed the PdAg bimetallic catalyst to circumvent the drawbacks of sole Pd and Ag. The PdAg catalyst with Ag-terminated surface not only shows a much lower overpotential (-0.55 V with CO current density of 1 mA/cm2) than Ag (−0.76 V), but also delivers a CO/H2 ratio 18 times as high as that for Pd at the potential of -0.75 V vs. RHE. The issue of CO poisoning is significantly alleviated on Ag-terminated PdAg surface, with the stability well retained after 4 h electrolysis at -0.75 V vs. RHE. Density functional theory (DFT) calculations reveal that the Ag-terminated PdAg surface features a lowered formation energy for COOH* and weakened adsorption for CO*, which both contribute to the enhanced performance for CO2 reduction. [Figure not available: see fulltext.].

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2866-2871
Number of pages6
JournalNano Research
Volume12
Issue number11
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Nov 2019
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • CO desorption
  • CO reduction
  • bimetallic
  • low overpotential

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