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Chiral Nanostructured Ag Films for Multicarbon Products from CO2 Electroreduction

The formation of multicarbon products from CO2 electroreduction is challenging on materials other than Cu-based catalysts. Ag has been known to be a typical metal catalyst, producing CO in CO2 electroreduction. The formation of C2+ products by Ag has never been reported because the carbon–carbon (C–...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of the American Chemical Society 2024-10, Vol.146 (41), p.28214-28221
Main Authors: Zhang, Wanning, Ai, Jing, Ouyang, Tianwei, Yu, Lu, Liu, Aokun, Han, Lu, Duan, Yingying, Tian, Changlin, Chu, Chaoyang, Ma, Yanhang, Che, Shunai, Fang, Yuxi
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:The formation of multicarbon products from CO2 electroreduction is challenging on materials other than Cu-based catalysts. Ag has been known to be a typical metal catalyst, producing CO in CO2 electroreduction. The formation of C2+ products by Ag has never been reported because the carbon–carbon (C–C) coupling is an unfavorable process due to the high reaction barrier energy of *OCCO. Here, we propose that the chirality-induced spin polarization of chiral nanostructured Ag films (CNAFs) can promote the formation of triplet OCCO by regulating its parallel electron spin alignment, and the helical lattice distortion of nanostructures can decrease the reaction energy of *OCCO, which triggers C–C coupling and promotes subsequent *OCCO hydrogenation to facilitate the generation of C2+ products. The CNAFs with helically lattice-distorted nanoflakes were fabricated via electrodeposition using phenylalanine as the symmetry-breaking agent. C2+ products (C2H4, C2H6, C3H8, C2H5OH, and CH3COOH) with a Faradaic efficiency of ∼4.7% and a current density of ∼22 mA/cm2 were generated in KHCO3 electrolytes under 12.5 atm of CO2 (g). Our findings propose that the chiral nanostructured materials can regulate the multifunctionality of catalytic performance in the catalytic reactions with triplet intermediates and products.
ISSN:0002-7863
1520-5126
1520-5126
DOI:10.1021/jacs.4c08445