(509d) Engineering Bimetallic Interface and Revealing the Mechanism for CO2 Electroreduction Reaction to C3+ Liquid Chemicals | AIChE

(509d) Engineering Bimetallic Interface and Revealing the Mechanism for CO2 Electroreduction Reaction to C3+ Liquid Chemicals

Authors 

Xu, Y. - Presenter, University of Massachusetts Lowell
Che, F., University of Massachusetts Lowell
Xin, H., Virginia Tech
Ross, M., University of Massachusetts Lowell
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).

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