Directing the architecture of surface-clean Cu₂O for CO electroreduction

Tailoring the morphology of nanocrystals is a promising way to enhance their catalytic performance. In most previous shape-controlled synthesis strategies, surfactants are inevitable due to their capability to stabilize different facets. However, the adsorbed surfactants block the intrinsic active s...

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Main Authors: Liu, Jiawei, You, Futian, He, Bowen, Wu, Yinglong, Wang, Dongdong, Zhou, Weiqiang, Qian, Cheng, Yang, Guangbao, Liu, Guofeng, Wang, Hou, Guo, Yi, Gu, Long, Feng, Lili, Li, Shuzhou, Zhao, Yanli
Other Authors: School of Physical and Mathematical Sciences
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2023
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/165490
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1654902023-06-21T07:40:12Z Directing the architecture of surface-clean Cu₂O for CO electroreduction Liu, Jiawei You, Futian He, Bowen Wu, Yinglong Wang, Dongdong Zhou, Weiqiang Qian, Cheng Yang, Guangbao Liu, Guofeng Wang, Hou Guo, Yi Gu, Long Feng, Lili Li, Shuzhou Zhao, Yanli School of Physical and Mathematical Sciences School of Materials Science and Engineering School of Chemistry, Chemical Engineering and Biotechnology Science::Chemistry::Inorganic chemistry Cuprous Oxide Electrocatalyst Morphology Nanocrystals Surfactant-Free Tailoring the morphology of nanocrystals is a promising way to enhance their catalytic performance. In most previous shape-controlled synthesis strategies, surfactants are inevitable due to their capability to stabilize different facets. However, the adsorbed surfactants block the intrinsic active sites of the nanocrystals, reducing their catalytic performance. For now, strategies to control the morphology without surfactants are still limited but necessary. Herein, a facile surfactant-free synthesis method is developed to regulate the morphology of Cu2O nanocrystals (e.g., solid nanocube, concave nanocube, cubic framework, branching nanocube, branching concave nanocube, and branching cubic framework) to enhance the electrocatalytic performance for the conversion of CO to n-propanol. Specifically, the Cu2O branching cubic framework (BCF-Cu2O), which is difficult to fabricate using previous surfactant-free methods, is fabricated by combining the concentration depletion effect and the oxidation etching process. More significantly, the BCF-Cu2O-derived catalyst (BCF) presents the highest n-propanol current density (−0.85 mA cm–2) at −0.45 V versus the reversible hydrogen electrode (VRHE), which is fivefold higher than that of the surfactant-coated Cu2O nanocube-derived catalyst (SFC, −0.17 mA cm–2). In terms of the n-propanol Faradaic efficiency in CO electroreduction, that of the BCF exhibits a 41% increase at −0.45 VRHE as compared with SFC. The high catalytic activity of the BCF that results from the clean surface and the coexistence of Cu(100) and Cu(110) in the lattice is well-supported by density functional theory calculations. Thus, this work presents an important paradigm for the facile fabrication of surface-clean nanocrystals with an enhanced application performance. Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR) Ministry of Education (MOE) Submitted/Accepted version We acknowledge the Singapore Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR) under the Manufacturing, Trade and Connectivity Individual Research Grant (Grant M21K2c0105) and the Ministry of Education Singapore under its Academic Research Funds (Grant RG3/21 and MOET2EP10120-0003). 2023-03-29T01:16:42Z 2023-03-29T01:16:42Z 2022 Journal Article Liu, J., You, F., He, B., Wu, Y., Wang, D., Zhou, W., Qian, C., Yang, G., Liu, G., Wang, H., Guo, Y., Gu, L., Feng, L., Li, S. & Zhao, Y. (2022). Directing the architecture of surface-clean Cu₂O for CO electroreduction. Journal of the American Chemical Society, 144(27), 12410-12420. https://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.2c04260 0002-7863 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/165490 10.1021/jacs.2c04260 27 144 12410 12420 en M21K2c0105 RG3/21 MOET2EP10120-0003 Journal of the American Chemical Society This document is the Accepted Manuscript version of a Published Work that appeared in final form in Journal of the American Chemical Society, copyright © 2022 American Chemical Society, after peer review and technical editing by the publisher. To access the final edited and published work see https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.2c04260. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Science::Chemistry::Inorganic chemistry
Cuprous Oxide
Electrocatalyst
Morphology
Nanocrystals
Surfactant-Free
spellingShingle Science::Chemistry::Inorganic chemistry
Cuprous Oxide
Electrocatalyst
Morphology
Nanocrystals
Surfactant-Free
Liu, Jiawei
You, Futian
He, Bowen
Wu, Yinglong
Wang, Dongdong
Zhou, Weiqiang
Qian, Cheng
Yang, Guangbao
Liu, Guofeng
Wang, Hou
Guo, Yi
Gu, Long
Feng, Lili
Li, Shuzhou
Zhao, Yanli
Directing the architecture of surface-clean Cu₂O for CO electroreduction
description Tailoring the morphology of nanocrystals is a promising way to enhance their catalytic performance. In most previous shape-controlled synthesis strategies, surfactants are inevitable due to their capability to stabilize different facets. However, the adsorbed surfactants block the intrinsic active sites of the nanocrystals, reducing their catalytic performance. For now, strategies to control the morphology without surfactants are still limited but necessary. Herein, a facile surfactant-free synthesis method is developed to regulate the morphology of Cu2O nanocrystals (e.g., solid nanocube, concave nanocube, cubic framework, branching nanocube, branching concave nanocube, and branching cubic framework) to enhance the electrocatalytic performance for the conversion of CO to n-propanol. Specifically, the Cu2O branching cubic framework (BCF-Cu2O), which is difficult to fabricate using previous surfactant-free methods, is fabricated by combining the concentration depletion effect and the oxidation etching process. More significantly, the BCF-Cu2O-derived catalyst (BCF) presents the highest n-propanol current density (−0.85 mA cm–2) at −0.45 V versus the reversible hydrogen electrode (VRHE), which is fivefold higher than that of the surfactant-coated Cu2O nanocube-derived catalyst (SFC, −0.17 mA cm–2). In terms of the n-propanol Faradaic efficiency in CO electroreduction, that of the BCF exhibits a 41% increase at −0.45 VRHE as compared with SFC. The high catalytic activity of the BCF that results from the clean surface and the coexistence of Cu(100) and Cu(110) in the lattice is well-supported by density functional theory calculations. Thus, this work presents an important paradigm for the facile fabrication of surface-clean nanocrystals with an enhanced application performance.
author2 School of Physical and Mathematical Sciences
author_facet School of Physical and Mathematical Sciences
Liu, Jiawei
You, Futian
He, Bowen
Wu, Yinglong
Wang, Dongdong
Zhou, Weiqiang
Qian, Cheng
Yang, Guangbao
Liu, Guofeng
Wang, Hou
Guo, Yi
Gu, Long
Feng, Lili
Li, Shuzhou
Zhao, Yanli
format Article
author Liu, Jiawei
You, Futian
He, Bowen
Wu, Yinglong
Wang, Dongdong
Zhou, Weiqiang
Qian, Cheng
Yang, Guangbao
Liu, Guofeng
Wang, Hou
Guo, Yi
Gu, Long
Feng, Lili
Li, Shuzhou
Zhao, Yanli
author_sort Liu, Jiawei
title Directing the architecture of surface-clean Cu₂O for CO electroreduction
title_short Directing the architecture of surface-clean Cu₂O for CO electroreduction
title_full Directing the architecture of surface-clean Cu₂O for CO electroreduction
title_fullStr Directing the architecture of surface-clean Cu₂O for CO electroreduction
title_full_unstemmed Directing the architecture of surface-clean Cu₂O for CO electroreduction
title_sort directing the architecture of surface-clean cu₂o for co electroreduction
publishDate 2023
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/165490
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