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Electrochemical Fragmentation of Cu2O Nanoparticles Enhancing Selective C-C Coupling from CO2 Reduction Reaction : Electrochemical Fragmentation of Cu<sub>2</sub>O Nanoparticles Enhancing Selective C-C Coupling from CO<sub>2</sub> Reduction Reaction

Cited 479 time in Web of Science Cited 493 time in Scopus
Authors

Jung, Hyejin; Lee, Si Young; Lee, Chan Woo; Cho, Min Kyung; Won, Da Hye; Kim, Cheonghee; Oh, Hyung-Suk; Min, Byoung Koun; Hwang, Yun Jeong

Issue Date
2019-03
Publisher
American Chemical Society
Citation
Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol.141 No.11, pp.4624-4633
Abstract
In this study, we demonstrate that the initial morphology of nanoparticles can be transformed into small fragmented nanoparticles, which were densely contacted to each other, during electrochemical CO2 reduction reaction (CO2RR). Cu-based nanoparticles were directly grown on a carbon support by using cysteamine immobilization agent, and the synthesized nanoparticle catalyst showed increasing activity during initial CO2RR, doubling Faradaic efficiency of C2H4 production from 27% to 57.3%. The increased C2H4 production activity was related to the morphological transformation over reaction time. Twenty nm cubic Cu2O crystalline particles gradually experienced in situ electrochemical fragmentation into 2-4 nm small particles under the negative potential, and the fragmentation was found to be initiated from the surface of the nanocrystal. Compared to Cu@CuO nanoparticle/C or bulk Cu-0 foil, the fragmented Cu-based NP/C catalyst achieved enhanced C2+, production selectivity, accounting 87% of the total CO2RR products, and suppressed H-2 production. In-situ X-ray absorption near edge structure studies showed metallic Cu state was observed under CO2RR, but the fragmented nanoparticles were more readily reoxidized at open circuit potential inside of the electrolyte, allowing labile Cu states. The unique morphology, small nanoparticles stacked upon on another, is proposed to promote C-C coupling reaction selectivity from CO2RR by suppressing HER.
ISSN
0002-7863
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/218484
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.8b11237
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  • College of Natural Sciences
  • Department of Chemistry
Research Area Artificial Photosynthesis, Electrochemical CO2 Utilization, Solar to chemical conversion device, 인공 광합성, 전기화학적 CO 2 활용, 태양광을 화학으로 변환하는 장치

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