CO2 electroreduction (CO2RR) is a sustainable alternative for producing fuels and chemicals. Metal cations in the electrolyte have a strong impact on the reaction, but mainly alkali species have... Show moreCO2 electroreduction (CO2RR) is a sustainable alternative for producing fuels and chemicals. Metal cations in the electrolyte have a strong impact on the reaction, but mainly alkali species have been studied in detail. In this work, we elucidate how multivalent cations (Li+, Cs+, Be2+, Mg2+, Ca2+, Ba2+, Al3+, Nd3+, and Ce3+) affect CO2RR and the competing hydrogen evolution by studying these reactions on polycrystalline gold at pH = 3. We observe that cations have no effect on proton reduction at low overpotentials, but at alkaline surface pH acidic cations undergo hydrolysis, generating a second proton reduction regime. The activity and onset for the water reduction reaction correlate with cation acidity, with weakly hydrated trivalent species leading to the highest activity. Acidic cations only favor CO2RR at low overpotentials and in acidic media. At high overpotentials, the activity for CO increases in the order Ca2+ < Li+ < Ba2+ < Cs+. To favor this reaction there must be an interplay between cation stabilization of the *CO2– intermediate, cation accumulation at the outer Helmholtz plane (OHP), and activity for water reduction. Ab initio molecular dynamics simulations with explicit electric field show that nonacidic cations show lower repulsion at the interface, accumulating more at the OHP, thus triggering local promoting effects. Water dissociation kinetics is increasingly promoted by strongly acidic cations (Nd3+, Al3+), in agreement with experimental evidence. Cs+, Ba2+, and Nd3+ coordinate to adsorbed CO2 steadily; thus they enable *CO2– stabilization and barrierless protonation to COOH and further reduction products. Show less
The electrocatalytic reduction of carbon dioxide is widely studied for the sustainable production of fuels and chemicals. Metal ions in the electrolyte influence the reaction performance, although... Show moreThe electrocatalytic reduction of carbon dioxide is widely studied for the sustainable production of fuels and chemicals. Metal ions in the electrolyte influence the reaction performance, although their main role is under discussion. Here we studied CO2 reduction on gold electrodes through cyclic voltammetry and showed that, without a metal cation, the reaction does not take place in a pure 1 mM H2SO4 electrolyte. We further investigated the CO2 reduction with and without metal cations in solution using scanning electrochemical microscopy in the surface-generation tip-collection mode with a platinum ultramicroelectrode as a CO and H2 sensor. CO is only produced on gold, silver or copper if a metal cation is added to the electrolyte. Density functional theory simulations confirmed that partially desolvated metal cations stabilize the CO2– intermediate via a short-range electrostatic interaction, which enables its reduction. Overall, our results redefine the reaction mechanism and provide definitive evidence that positively charged species from the electrolyte are key to stabilize the crucial reaction intermediate. Show less
The electroreduction of CO2 (CO2RR) is a promising strategy toward sustainable fuels. Cu is the only Earth-abundant and pure metal capable of catalyzing CO2-to-hydrocarbons conversion with... Show moreThe electroreduction of CO2 (CO2RR) is a promising strategy toward sustainable fuels. Cu is the only Earth-abundant and pure metal capable of catalyzing CO2-to-hydrocarbons conversion with significant Faradaic efficiencies; yet, its dynamic structure under operando CO2RR conditions remains unknown. Here, we track the Cu structure operando by electrochemical scanning tunneling microscopy and Raman spectroscopy. Surprisingly, polycrystalline Cu surfaces reconstruct forming Cu nanocuboids whose size can be controlled by the polarization potential and the time employed in their in situ synthesis, without the assistance of organic surfactants and/or halide anions. If the Cu surface is covered by a graphene monolayer, smaller features with enhanced catalytic activity for CO2RR can be prepared. The graphene-protecting layer softens the 3D morphological changes that Cu-based catalysts suffer when exposed to aggressive electrochemical environments and allows us to track the kinetic roughening process. This novel strategy is promising for improving Cu long-term stability, and consequently, it could be used as a platform to ultimately control product selectivity. Show less