Abstract
Electrochemical conversion of carbon dioxide (electrochemical reduction of carbon dioxide) to value-added products is a promising way to solve CO2 emission problems. This paper describes a facile one-pot approach to synthesize palladium–copper (Pd–Cu) bimetallic catalysts with different structures. Highly efficient performance and tunable product distributions are achieved due to a coordinative function of both enriched low-coordinated sites and composition effects. The concave rhombic dodecahedral Cu3Pd (CRD-Cu3Pd) decreases the onset potential for methane (CH4) by 200 mV and shows a sevenfold CH4 current density at −1.2 V (vs reversible hydrogen electrode) compared to Cu foil. The flower-like Pd3Cu (FL-Pd3Cu) exhibits high faradaic efficiency toward CO in a wide potential range from −0.7 to −1.3 V, and reaches a fourfold CO current density at −1.3 V compared to commercial Pd black. Tafel plots and density functional theory calculations suggest that both the introduction of high-index facets and alloying contribute to the enhanced CH4 current of CRD-Cu3Pd, while the alloy effect is responsible for high CO selectivity of FL-Pd3Cu.
Original language | English |
---|---|
Article number | 1703314 |
Journal | Small |
Volume | 14 |
Issue number | 7 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 15 Feb 2018 |
Externally published | Yes |
Keywords
- bimetallic
- carbon dioxide electrochemical reduction (COER)
- compositional control
- low-coordinated sites
- tunable product distribution