TY - JOUR
T1 - Selective and Scalable CO2 Electrolysis Enabled by Conductive Zinc Ion-Implanted Zeolite-Supported Cadmium Oxide Nanoclusters
AU - Zhang, Zhen
AU - Li, Minzhe
AU - Gao, Rui
AU - Yang, Shuwen
AU - Ma, Qianyi
AU - Feng, Renfei
AU - Dou, Haozhen
AU - Dang, Jianan
AU - Wen, Guobin
AU - Bai, Zhengyu
AU - Liu, Dianhua
AU - Feng, Ming
AU - Chen, Zhongwei
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2024/3/6
Y1 - 2024/3/6
N2 - Catalyst supports play an essential role in catalytic reactions, hinting at pronounced metal-support effects. Zeolites are a propitious support in heterogeneous catalysts, while their use in the electrocatalytic CO2 reduction reaction has been limited as yet because of their electrically insulating nature and serious competing hydrogen evolution reaction (HER). Enlightened by theoretical prediction, herein, we implant zinc ions into the structural skeleton of a zeolite Y to strategically tailor a favorable electrocatalytic platform with remarkably enhanced electronic conduction and strong HER inhibition capability, which incorporates ultrafine cadmium oxide nanoclusters as guest species into the supercages of the tailored 12-ring window framework. The metal d-bandwidth tuning of cadmium by skeletal zinc steers the extent of substrate-molecule orbital mixing, enhancing the stabilization of the key intermediate *COOH while weakening the CO poisoning effect. Furthermore, the strong cadmium-zinc interplay causes a considerable thermodynamic barrier for water dissociation in the conversion of H+ to *H, potently suppressing the competing HER. Therefore, we achieve an industrial-level partial current density of 335 mA cm-2 and remarkable Faradaic efficiency of 97.1% for CO production and stably maintain Faradaic efficiency above 90% at the industrially relevant current density for over 120 h. This work provides a proof of concept of tailored conductive zeolite as a favorable electrocatalytic support for industrial-level CO2 electrolysis and will significantly enhance the adaptability of conductive zeolite-based electrocatalysts in a variety of electrocatalysis and energy conversion applications.
AB - Catalyst supports play an essential role in catalytic reactions, hinting at pronounced metal-support effects. Zeolites are a propitious support in heterogeneous catalysts, while their use in the electrocatalytic CO2 reduction reaction has been limited as yet because of their electrically insulating nature and serious competing hydrogen evolution reaction (HER). Enlightened by theoretical prediction, herein, we implant zinc ions into the structural skeleton of a zeolite Y to strategically tailor a favorable electrocatalytic platform with remarkably enhanced electronic conduction and strong HER inhibition capability, which incorporates ultrafine cadmium oxide nanoclusters as guest species into the supercages of the tailored 12-ring window framework. The metal d-bandwidth tuning of cadmium by skeletal zinc steers the extent of substrate-molecule orbital mixing, enhancing the stabilization of the key intermediate *COOH while weakening the CO poisoning effect. Furthermore, the strong cadmium-zinc interplay causes a considerable thermodynamic barrier for water dissociation in the conversion of H+ to *H, potently suppressing the competing HER. Therefore, we achieve an industrial-level partial current density of 335 mA cm-2 and remarkable Faradaic efficiency of 97.1% for CO production and stably maintain Faradaic efficiency above 90% at the industrially relevant current density for over 120 h. This work provides a proof of concept of tailored conductive zeolite as a favorable electrocatalytic support for industrial-level CO2 electrolysis and will significantly enhance the adaptability of conductive zeolite-based electrocatalysts in a variety of electrocatalysis and energy conversion applications.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85186221811&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/jacs.4c01061
DO - 10.1021/jacs.4c01061
M3 - 文章
C2 - 38394777
AN - SCOPUS:85186221811
SN - 0002-7863
VL - 146
SP - 6397
EP - 6407
JO - Journal of the American Chemical Society
JF - Journal of the American Chemical Society
IS - 9
ER -