Issue 70, 2020

Atomically dispersed Cu and Fe on N-doped carbon materials for CO2 electroreduction: insight into the curvature effect on activity and selectivity

Abstract

CO2 electroreduction reaction (CO2ER) by single metal sites embedded in N-doped graphene (M@N-Gr, M = Cu and Fe) and carbon nanotubes (M@N-CNT, M = Cu and Fe) has been explored by extensive first-principles calculations in combination with the computational hydrogen electrode model. Both atomically dispersed Cu and Fe nanostructures, as the single atom catalysts (SACs), have higher selectivity towards CO2ER, compared to hydrogen evolution reduction (HER), and they can catalyze CO2ER to CO, HCOOH, and CH3OH. In comparison with Cu@N-Gr, the limiting potentials for generating CO, HCOOH, and CH3OH are reduced obviously on the high-curvature Cu@N-CNT. However, the curvature effect is less notable for the single-Fe-atom catalysts. Such discrepancies can be attributed to the d-band center changes of the single Cu and Fe sites and their different dependences on the curvature of carbon-based support materials.

Graphical abstract: Atomically dispersed Cu and Fe on N-doped carbon materials for CO2 electroreduction: insight into the curvature effect on activity and selectivity

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
18 Oct 2020
Accepted
22 Nov 2020
First published
26 Nov 2020
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

RSC Adv., 2020,10, 43075-43084

Atomically dispersed Cu and Fe on N-doped carbon materials for CO2 electroreduction: insight into the curvature effect on activity and selectivity

Y. Zhang, L. Fang and Z. Cao, RSC Adv., 2020, 10, 43075 DOI: 10.1039/D0RA08857A

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