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Dual-site catalysts featuring platinum-group-metal atoms on copper shapes boost hydrocarbon formations in electrocatalytic CO2 reduction
Dual-site catalysts featuring platinum-group-metal atoms on copper shapes boost hydrocarbon formations in electrocatalytic CO2 reduction
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Dual-site catalysts featuring platinum-group-metal atoms on copper shapes boost hydrocarbon formations in electrocatalytic CO2 reduction
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Dual-site catalysts featuring platinum-group-metal atoms on copper shapes boost hydrocarbon formations in electrocatalytic CO2 reduction
Dual-site catalysts featuring platinum-group-metal atoms on copper shapes boost hydrocarbon formations in electrocatalytic CO2 reduction

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Dual-site catalysts featuring platinum-group-metal atoms on copper shapes boost hydrocarbon formations in electrocatalytic CO2 reduction
Dual-site catalysts featuring platinum-group-metal atoms on copper shapes boost hydrocarbon formations in electrocatalytic CO2 reduction
Journal Article

Dual-site catalysts featuring platinum-group-metal atoms on copper shapes boost hydrocarbon formations in electrocatalytic CO2 reduction

2023
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Overview
Copper-based catalyst is uniquely positioned to catalyze the hydrocarbon formations through electrochemical CO 2 reduction. The catalyst design freedom is limited for alloying copper with H-affinitive elements represented by platinum group metals because the latter would easily drive the hydrogen evolution reaction to override CO 2 reduction. We report an adept design of anchoring atomically dispersed platinum group metal species on both polycrystalline and shape-controlled Cu catalysts, which now promote targeted CO 2 reduction reaction while frustrating the undesired hydrogen evolution reaction. Notably, alloys with similar metal formulations but comprising small platinum or palladium clusters would fail this objective. With an appreciable amount of CO-Pd 1 moieties on copper surfaces, facile CO * hydrogenation to CHO * or CO-CHO * coupling is now viable as one of the main pathways on Cu(111) or Cu(100) to selectively produce CH 4 or C 2 H 4 through Pd-Cu dual-site pathways. The work broadens copper alloying choices for CO 2 reduction in aqueous phases. The inclusion of platinum-group metals for CO2 reduction electrocatalyst design may trigger the unwanted hydrogen evolution reaction. However, here the authors show that single-atom Pd and Pt on facet-selective Cu can selectively boost CO2 to CH4 or C2H4 conversion through dual-site pathways.