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Kim, Dongha
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Site-selective protonation enables efficient carbon monoxide electroreduction to acetate

Author(s)
Wang, XinyueChen, YuanjunLi, FengMiao, Rui KaiHuang, Jianan ErickZhao, ZilinLi, Xiao-YanDorakhan, RohamChu, SenlinWu, JinhongZheng, SixingNi, WeiyanKim, DonghaPark, SungjinLiang, YongxiangOzden, AdnanOu, PengfeiHou, YangSinton, DavidSargent, Edward H.
Issued Date
2024-01
DOI
10.1038/s41467-024-44727-z
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/91264
Fulltext
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-024-44727-z
Citation
NATURE COMMUNICATIONS, v.15, no.1, pp.616
Abstract
Electrosynthesis of acetate from CO offers the prospect of a low-carbon-intensity route to this valuable chemical--but only once sufficient selectivity, reaction rate and stability are realized. It is a high priority to achieve the protonation of the relevant intermediates in a controlled fashion, and to achieve this while suppressing the competing hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) and while steering multicarbon (C2+) products to a single valuable product--an example of which is acetate. Here we report interface engineering to achieve solid/liquid/gas triple-phase interface regulation, and we find that it leads to site-selective protonation of intermediates and the preferential stabilization of the ketene intermediates: this, we find, leads to improved selectivity and energy efficiency toward acetate. Once we further tune the catalyst composition and also optimize for interfacial water management, we achieve a cadmium-copper catalyst that shows an acetate Faradaic efficiency (FE) of 75% with ultralow HER (<0.2% H-2 FE) at 150 mA cm(-2). We develop a high-pressure membrane electrode assembly system to increase CO coverage by controlling gas reactant distribution and achieve 86% acetate FE simultaneous with an acetate full-cell energy efficiency (EE) of 32%, the highest energy efficiency reported in direct acetate electrosynthesis.
Publisher
NATURE PORTFOLIO
ISSN
2041-1723
Keyword
TOTAL-ENERGY CALCULATIONSELECTROCHEMICAL REDUCTIONCO REDUCTIONFUELS

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