TY - JOUR
T1 - Promoting the electrocatalytic conversion of CO2 to ethanol at ultra-low potential by fully exposing periodic low-index facets in hexagonal pyramidal Cu
AU - Ma, Dandan
AU - Chen, Jiantao
AU - Jia, Yufei
AU - Guo, Nengfeng
AU - Zhi, Chuanqi
AU - He, Dan
AU - Chen, Yu
AU - Shi, Jian Wen
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2026 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2026/6/5
Y1 - 2026/6/5
N2 - The close correlation between the crystal facet exposure features of copper (Cu) catalysts and their CO₂ reduction reaction (CO₂RR) products has attracted significant research interest. Driving efficient CO₂ reduction to ethanol on Cu catalysts through appropriate facet tailoring techniques holds considerable research value. In this work, computational studies reveal that periodically alternating (100)/(110)/(111) facets arranged in an orderly manner on Cu catalysts can facilitate a smooth reaction pathway from CO₂ to ethanol via a facet-dependent relay catalysis mechanism. This implies that constructing structures with periodically alternating exposed facets is crucial for promoting ethanol formation. Guided by these theoretical insights, we adjusted the morphology of Cu catalyst in an electrodeposition fabrication strategy by changing the precursor of Cu. By leveraging the synergistic effect of sodium citrate chelation and anion-specific adsorption to precisely control release of Cu ion, the three-dimensional hexagonal pyramidal Cu catalyst was fabricated with periodically exposed (100) and (111) facets, and the interfacial strain engineering induced abundant (110) facets at the junctures. As predicted, the resulting hexagonal pyramidal Cu catalyst achieved a remarkably high Faradaic efficiency of 79.79 % for ethanol production at −0.125 V vs. RHE. Detailed in situ FTIR spectroscopy confirmed that the stepped (111)/(110)/(100) configurations facilitate a cascade reaction pathway towards ethanol. This work provides a successful framework for theoretically guided catalyst design and performance optimization, which may stimulate the study on overcoming inherent limitations in multi-carbon product synthesis through crystallographic phase engineering.
AB - The close correlation between the crystal facet exposure features of copper (Cu) catalysts and their CO₂ reduction reaction (CO₂RR) products has attracted significant research interest. Driving efficient CO₂ reduction to ethanol on Cu catalysts through appropriate facet tailoring techniques holds considerable research value. In this work, computational studies reveal that periodically alternating (100)/(110)/(111) facets arranged in an orderly manner on Cu catalysts can facilitate a smooth reaction pathway from CO₂ to ethanol via a facet-dependent relay catalysis mechanism. This implies that constructing structures with periodically alternating exposed facets is crucial for promoting ethanol formation. Guided by these theoretical insights, we adjusted the morphology of Cu catalyst in an electrodeposition fabrication strategy by changing the precursor of Cu. By leveraging the synergistic effect of sodium citrate chelation and anion-specific adsorption to precisely control release of Cu ion, the three-dimensional hexagonal pyramidal Cu catalyst was fabricated with periodically exposed (100) and (111) facets, and the interfacial strain engineering induced abundant (110) facets at the junctures. As predicted, the resulting hexagonal pyramidal Cu catalyst achieved a remarkably high Faradaic efficiency of 79.79 % for ethanol production at −0.125 V vs. RHE. Detailed in situ FTIR spectroscopy confirmed that the stepped (111)/(110)/(100) configurations facilitate a cascade reaction pathway towards ethanol. This work provides a successful framework for theoretically guided catalyst design and performance optimization, which may stimulate the study on overcoming inherent limitations in multi-carbon product synthesis through crystallographic phase engineering.
KW - CO reduction reaction
KW - Electrocatalysis
KW - Hexagonal pyramidal Cu
KW - High ethanol product selectivity
KW - Periodic (111)/(110)/(100) step sites
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105026860594
U2 - 10.1016/j.apcatb.2026.126423
DO - 10.1016/j.apcatb.2026.126423
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:105026860594
SN - 0926-3373
VL - 386
JO - Applied Catalysis B: Environmental
JF - Applied Catalysis B: Environmental
M1 - 126423
ER -