Scientists turn carbon emissions into useful chemical with new copper catalyst
Researchers have developed a copper-based catalyst that converts CO2 directly into acetate, a building block for chemicals and fuels. The breakthrough could help industries reduce emissions while creating value from captured carbon—a key step toward making carbon capture economically viable at scale.
Originaltitel: High-Nuclearity Copper Molecular Catalysts for Electrocatalytic CO-to-Acetate Conversion
<p>Ligand-modified metal nanoclusters (NCs) have emerged as candidate materials for catalysis owing to their well-defined yet tunable structure and their metal centers' high nuclearity. We posited that NC-based catalytic behavior will depend on ligand properties, the accessibility of active sites, and their atomic configuration. We synthesized a series of Cu NC-based catalysts, tuned local hydrophobicity through ligand adjustment, balanced the ligand coverage and active site exposure, and found that we were, in this way, able to engender efficient electrosynthesis of acetate via CO electroreduction. Computation and operando spectroscopy show that asymmetric Cu-Cu sites, which determine the CO binding strength, impact the bifurcation step after C-C coupling. The best of these catalysts, Cu13Nap, achieved an acetate Faradaic efficiency (FE) of 86% and an energy efficiency of 29% in a 5 bar system, exceeding the single C2+ FE of <50% previously achieved by NC-based catalysts.</p>