Temperature promotes selectivity during electrochemical CO2 reduction on NiO:SnO2 nanofibers
Electrolyzers operate over a range of temperatures; hence, it is crucial to design electrocatalysts that do not compromise the product distribution unless temperature can promote selectivity. This work reports a synthetic approach based on electrospinning to produce NiO:SnO2 nanofibers (NFs) for selectively reducing CO2 to formate above room temperature. The NFs comprise compact but disjoined NiO and SnO2 nanocrystals identified with STEM. The results are attributed to the segregation of NiO and SnO2 confirmed with XRD. The NFs are evaluated for the CO2 reduction reaction (CO2RR) over various temperatures (25, 30, 35, and 40 degrees C). The highest faradaic efficiencies to formate (FEHCOO-) are reached by NiO:SnO2 NFs containing 50% of NiO and 50% SnO2 (NiOSnO50NF), and 25% of NiO and 75% SnO2 (NiOSnO75NF), at an electroreduction temperature of 40 degrees C. At 40 degrees C, product distribution is assessed with in situ differential electrochemical mass spectrometry (DEMS), recognizing methane and other species, like formate, hydrogen, and carbon monoxide, identified in an electrochemical flow cell. XPS and EELS unveiled the FEHCOO- variations due to a synergistic effect between Ni and Sn. DFT-based calculations reveal the superior thermodynamic stability of Ni-containing SnO2 systems towards CO2RR over the pure oxide systems. Furthermore, computational surface Pourbaix diagrams showed that the presence of Ni as a surface dopant increases the reduction of the SnO2 surface and enables the production of formate. Our results highlight the synergy between NiO and SnO2, which can promote the electroreduction of CO2 at temperatures above room temperature.
Funding
Chemical Reaction Engineering by Additive Manufacturing of Mesoscale MetaMaterials
European Research Council
Find out more...Towards Nanostructured Electrocatalysts with Superior Stability
European Research Council
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Publication
Journal of Materials Chemistry A, 2024, 12, 32821-Publisher
Royal Society of ChemistryOther Funding information
The authors thank Mark Smithers and Gerard Kip (MESA+Institute, University of Twente) for their support. The research leading to this report's results has received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program (Grant Agree?ment No. 742004). R. L. (GOIPG/2022/442) thanks the Irish Research Council (IRC) for an IRC postgraduate fellowship. R. L. and M. V. acknowledge the Irish Centre for High-End Computing (ICHEC) for the computational facilities and support. M. S. and T. K. acknowledge funding from the Jane and Aatos Erkko foundation (USVA project). In addition, F. R.-Z. acknowledges the European Research Council (ERC) Starting Grant 123STABLE (Grant agreement ID: 852208)Also affiliated with
- Bernal Institute
Sustainable development goals
- (13) Climate Action
External identifier
Department or School
- Chemical Sciences