Mechanistic Insights into OC-COH Coupling in CO2 Electroreduction on Fragmented Copper

J Am Chem Soc. 2022 Aug 10;144(31):14005-14011. doi: 10.1021/jacs.2c01044. Epub 2022 Jul 29.

Abstract

The carbon-carbon (C-C) bond formation is essential for the electroconversion of CO2 into high-energy-density C2+ products, and the precise coupling pathways remain controversial. Although recent computational investigations have proposed that the OC-COH coupling pathway is more favorable in specific reaction conditions than the well-known CO dimerization pathway, the experimental evidence is still lacking, partly due to the separated catalyst design and mechanistic/spectroscopic exploration. Here, we employ density functional theory calculations to show that on low-coordinated copper sites, the *CO bindings are strengthened, and the adsorbed *CO coupling with their hydrogenation species, *COH, receives precedence over CO dimerization. Experimentally, we construct a fragmented Cu catalyst with abundant low-coordinated sites, exhibiting a 77.8% Faradaic efficiency for C2+ products at 300 mA cm-2. With a suite of in situ spectroscopic studies, we capture an *OCCOH intermediate on the fragmented Cu surfaces, providing direct evidence to support the OC-COH coupling pathway. The mechanistic insights of this research elucidate how to design materials in favor of OC-COH coupling toward efficient C2+ production from CO2 reduction.