(509d) Engineering Bimetallic Interface and Revealing the Mechanism for CO2 Electroreduction Reaction to C3+ Liquid Chemicals
AIChE Annual Meeting
2024
2024 AIChE Annual Meeting
Catalysis and Reaction Engineering Division
Carbon Dioxide Upgrading II: Catalytic Mechanisms of CO2 Reduction
Wednesday, October 30, 2024 - 1:24pm to 1:42pm
Intermittent renewable electricity powered reduction reaction of CO2 (CO2RR) to value-added liquid C3+ chemicals is a net-zero-carbon process and could reduce logistics required to transport fuels and increase local resiliency to power outages and fuel consumption. However, current catalyst designs for CO2RR-to-C3+ are via the conventional trial and error method due to the unknown reaction mechanism. To address this challenge, we explored the CO2RR-to-C3+ mechanism via density functional theory (DFT) calculations and designed a Pd/Au bimetallic catalyst.1 We investigated C-C coupling reactions from C1 to C5, identifying *CH2 as the key intermediate and CH2-C1 coupling as the potential rate-determining step for C3+ formation. Remarkably, the PdAu(111) interfacial site exhibited the lower energetic requirements for the key intermediate *CH2 formation and the potential RDS. Our results also show that increasing CO surface coverages promoted the formation of bimetallic interfacial sites, leading to lower energetics in the CH2-C1 coupling step. As a result, this enhancement favored C3+ formation in CO2RR. Via varying the Pd/Au ratios and engineering the d-band center of the interfacial site, we constructed a volcano-like plot of CH2-C1 kinetics as a function of the binding strength of key intermediate *CH2 and optimized the bimetallic surface for promoting C3+ production.
Our findings could guide the rational design of engineering bimetallic interfaces and their near-surface microenvironment for CO2RR to valuable C3+ liquid chemicals. Future work aims to create a robust and dynamic learning algorithm to establish a comprehensive model to automatically generate and select the most effective alloy interface sites for CO2RR, targeting the production of longer carbon-chain fuels.
References
(1) Xu, Y.; Ross, M. B.; Xin, H.; Che, F. Engineering bimetallic interfaces and revealing the mechanism for carbon dioxide electroreduction to C3+ liquid chemicals. Cell Reports Physical Science 2023, 4 (12).