Journal article
CO 2 Electrochemical Reduction to Hydrocarbon Fuels on Copper Nanoparticles Supported on Nanostructured Carbons
Meeting abstracts (Electrochemical Society), v MA2016-02(40), pp 3010-3010
01 Sep 2016
Abstract
Recently [1,2], we reported activity and selectivity of Cu nanoparticles for electroreduction of CO
2
to hydrocarbon fuels (CH
4
and C
2
H
4
) on three nanostructured supports: reduced graphene oxide (rGO), single walled carbon nanotubes (SWNT) and onion-like carbon (OLC) [3]. Cu/OLC catalyst was found to be superior to the other two catalysts in terms of stability, activity and selectivity towards C
2
H
4
generation. We propose that the unusual Cu/OLC catalyst design offers superior activity and stability. The nanostructured catalyst envelops a shell of OLC around Cu nanoparticles; this layering acts as a filter that protects the catalyst surface from undesirable adsorbed species.
Herein, we examine the effect of nanostructured support on catalysts’ activity and selectivity in more detail. In addition, we determine whether supported Cu nanoparticles are durable enough to withstand potential excursions to open circuit potential, which are commonly encountered during CO
2
electrolysis.
Cu nanoparticles of 15-25 nm diameters on different carbon supports were synthesized by the reduction of CuCl
2
by NaBH
4
. This procedure was carried out in suspensions of carbon supports in aqueous ethylene glycol solutions (20% v/v). X-Ray diffraction (XRD), high-resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM), X-Ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and pair-distribution function (PDF) were used for
ex-situ
analysis of nanoparticles. The catalytic activities of supported Cu nanoparticles and their selectivities towards hydrocarbon generation were evaluated using (1) a sealed rotating disk electrode (RDE) setup connected to a gas chromatograph (GC) and (2) a scanning flow cell (SFC) coupled to differential electrochemical mass-spectrometer (DEMS) [4]. Durability of supported Cu nanoparticles was evaluated using SFC connected to inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometer (ICP-MS) setup [5].
Fig. 1 shows partial currents of H
2
(A), CH
4
(B), C
2
H
4
(C),CH
3
OH (D) and CO
2
electroreduction reaction total currents (E) measured on Cu/OLC, Cu/SWNT and Vulcan Carbon-supported Cu (Cu/VC) catalysts in DEMS-SFC configuration. Cu/VC catalyst is shown as a reference. Structural HRTEM and PDF (Fig. 2) analysis shows long-range ordering of the Cu-OLC catalyst and confirms high crystallinity of synthesized Cu nanoparticles.
This presentation will provide analysis of the effect of support on catalytic activity, selectivity and durability of Cu nanoparticles as applied to electrochemical CO
2
reduction.
References
[1] O.A. Baturina, Q. Lu, M.A. Padilla, L. Xin, W. Li, A. Serov, K. Artyushkova, P. Atanassov, F. Xu, A. Epshteyn, T. Brintlinger, M. Schuette, G. Collins,
ACS Catalysis
4 (2014) 3682
[2] Q. Lu, A. Purdy, B. Dyatkin, Y. Gogotsi and O. Baturina, Abstract I02-1235, 228
th
ECS meeting, October 2015, Phoenix, AZ.
[3] J. K. McDonough, Y. Gogotsi,
Interface
, 22 (2013) 61.
[4] J.-P. Grote, A.R. Zeradjanin, S. Cherevko, K.J.J. Mayrhofer,
Rev. Sci. Instrum.
, 85 (2014) 1041011.
[5] S.O. Klemm, A.A. Topalov, C.A. Laska, K.J.J. Mayrhofer,
Electrochem. Commun.
, 13 (2011) 1533.
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Details
- Title
- CO 2 Electrochemical Reduction to Hydrocarbon Fuels on Copper Nanoparticles Supported on Nanostructured Carbons
- Creators
- Qin Lu - #N# aNaval Research LaboratoryAndrew Purdy - #N# aNaval Research LaboratoryBoris Dyatkin - #N# aNaval Research LaboratoryJan-Philip Grote - #N# bMax-Planck Institut für EisenforschungSerhiy Cherevko - Helmholtz Institute Erlangen-NürnbergKatharine Page - Oak Ridge National LaboratoryRaymond R Unocic - Oak Ridge National LaboratoryYury Gogotsi - Drexel UniversityOlga A Baturina - #N# aNaval Research Laboratory
- Publication Details
- Meeting abstracts (Electrochemical Society), v MA2016-02(40), pp 3010-3010
- Publisher
- Institute of Physics (IOP)
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Language
- English
- Academic Unit
- Materials Science and Engineering
- Other Identifier
- 991019186781504721