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Electrochemical CO2 reduction via strain-engineered AuPd alloy catalysts

  • Shangdong Ji
  • , Qian Wang
  • , Jiapeng Huang
  • , Ruiyun Guo
  • , Yanan Li
  • , Yangzi Zheng
  • , Rui Li
  • , Yaohui Zhao
  • , Chao Wu
  • , Mingshang Jin
  • Xi'an Jiaotong University
  • Xi'an University of Science and Technology

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

3 Scopus citations

Abstract

Strain engineering offers a promising pathway to optimize catalytic performance by modulating electronic structures, yet the mechanistic role of surface strain in electrocatalytic CO2 reduction (CO2RR) remains insufficiently understood, hindering the rational design of high-performance catalysts for CO2RR. In this work, we systematically elucidate the strain-activity relationship in AuPd alloy catalysts by developing a universal strain-tuning strategy through controlled lattice expansion of Pd cores in Pd@Au4Pd1 core-shell nanostructures. This approach enables the precise synthesis of Au-based catalysts with continuously tunable tensile strains (1.7 %–4.4 %). Flow cell measurements demonstrate that tensile-strained catalysts exhibit exceptional CO2RR performance, achieving a CO faradaic efficiency of 94.1 % at −0.55 V vs. RHE, surpassing that of the unstrained counterparts (75.9 %) via suppressing competing hydrogen evolution. The CO partial current density increases linearly with strain magnitude, reaching 67.5 mA cm−2 at −0.55 V for the optimal catalyst (4.4 % strain). Density functional theory calculations reveal that tensile strain lowers the energy barrier for the rate-limiting *COOH formation step and strengthens *CO adsorption attributed to an upward shift in the d-band center. These findings establish a quantitative correlation between lattice strain, electronic structure modulation, and catalytic behavior, providing a generalizable framework for engineering strain-optimized electrocatalysts for sustainable CO2 conversion.

Original languageEnglish
Article number166114
JournalChemical Engineering Journal
Volume520
DOIs
StatePublished - 15 Sep 2025

Keywords

  • AuPd alloy
  • CORR
  • Core-shell nanocatalyst
  • Flow cell
  • Strain engineering

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