TY - JOUR
T1 - Enhanced Hydrogen Supply to Atomically Dispersed Copper Sites through Close Cooperation with Oxygen Vacancies in Black TiO2 to Promote CH4 Production in CO2 Electrolysis
AU - Anzai, Akihiko
AU - Fukushima, Masato
AU - Rivera Rocabado, David S.
AU - Ishimoto, Takayoshi
AU - Sugiyama, Takeharu
AU - Ohtani, Bunsho
AU - Kobayashi, Hirokazu
AU - Liu, Ming Han
AU - Donoshita, Masaki
AU - Noguchi, Tomohiro Goroh
AU - Maurya, Shailendra K.
AU - Kato, Kenichi
AU - Sit, Chun Yat
AU - Kenis, Paul J.A.
AU - Yamauchi, Miho
N1 - A part of the XAFS experiments was performed at Kyushu University Beamline (SAGA-LS/BL06) with the proposal of no. 2023IIK004. We would like to acknowledge Tomokazu Yamamoto and Yumi Fukunaga at the Ultramicroscopy Research Center at Kyushu University for STEM characterization. We would like to acknowledge Jo\u0308rg W. A. Fischer at Institute for Catalysis at Hokkaido University for EPR simulation. This work was supported by Japan Society for the Promotion of Science Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research 18H05517, 22K19088, 23H00313, 24H02202 and 24H02205 (M.Y.) and Moonshot Research and Development Program JPNP18016 (M.Y., P.K.).
This work was supported by Japan Society for the Promotion of Science Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research 18H05517, 22K19088, 23H00313, 24H02202 and 24H02205 (M.Y.) and Moonshot Research and Development Program JPNP18016 (M.Y., P.K.).
PY - 2025/4/16
Y1 - 2025/4/16
N2 - CO2 electroreduction (eCO2R) holds promise as an environmentally friendly approach to reducing greenhouse gas emissions. Cu is a representative catalyst with high eCO2R activity. However, its selectivity for CH4 synthesis is still insufficient due to the slow eight-electron transfer to a single carbon, the predominance of C-C coupling reactions toward C2+ products on Cu, as well as occurrence of the hydrogen evolution reaction. Here, for high CH4 selectivity, we demonstrate a genuine hydrogen supply to atomically dispersed Cu sites (AD-Cu) via the cooperative function of oxygen vacancy (VO) formed on defective black anatase TiO2 (Cu-TiO2-H2), that is prepared by exposing Cu-doped TiO2 (Cu-TiO2) to hydrogen gas. Cu-TiO2-H2 exhibited a remarkable Faradaic efficiency for CH4 production of 63% and a partial current density of −120 mA cm-2. The catalytic mechanism for the high CH4 selectivity was elucidated using a variety of spectroscopies, such as electron spin resonance, reversed double-beam photoacoustic spectroscopy (RDB-PAS) and in situ Raman measurements, with the support of quantum chemical calculations. In situ Raman measurements revealed that Cu-TiO2-H2 greatly accelerates proton consumption for the hydrogenation of *CO intermediates and that the surface pH on Cu-TiO2-H2 is sufficiently high to stabilize *CHO intermediates, key species for CH4 formation. DFT calculations support the stability of the intermediates during the process of forming *CHO. All our results suggest that VO contiguous to AD-Cu on Cu-TiO2-H2 promotes water dissociation and smoothly supplies hydrogen to AD-Cu on Cu-TiO2-H2, thus facilitating CH4 formation in eCO2R.
AB - CO2 electroreduction (eCO2R) holds promise as an environmentally friendly approach to reducing greenhouse gas emissions. Cu is a representative catalyst with high eCO2R activity. However, its selectivity for CH4 synthesis is still insufficient due to the slow eight-electron transfer to a single carbon, the predominance of C-C coupling reactions toward C2+ products on Cu, as well as occurrence of the hydrogen evolution reaction. Here, for high CH4 selectivity, we demonstrate a genuine hydrogen supply to atomically dispersed Cu sites (AD-Cu) via the cooperative function of oxygen vacancy (VO) formed on defective black anatase TiO2 (Cu-TiO2-H2), that is prepared by exposing Cu-doped TiO2 (Cu-TiO2) to hydrogen gas. Cu-TiO2-H2 exhibited a remarkable Faradaic efficiency for CH4 production of 63% and a partial current density of −120 mA cm-2. The catalytic mechanism for the high CH4 selectivity was elucidated using a variety of spectroscopies, such as electron spin resonance, reversed double-beam photoacoustic spectroscopy (RDB-PAS) and in situ Raman measurements, with the support of quantum chemical calculations. In situ Raman measurements revealed that Cu-TiO2-H2 greatly accelerates proton consumption for the hydrogenation of *CO intermediates and that the surface pH on Cu-TiO2-H2 is sufficiently high to stabilize *CHO intermediates, key species for CH4 formation. DFT calculations support the stability of the intermediates during the process of forming *CHO. All our results suggest that VO contiguous to AD-Cu on Cu-TiO2-H2 promotes water dissociation and smoothly supplies hydrogen to AD-Cu on Cu-TiO2-H2, thus facilitating CH4 formation in eCO2R.
KW - DFT calculations
KW - In situ Raman
KW - TiO
KW - cu
KW - electrochemical CO reduction
KW - oxygen vacancy
KW - single-atom catalyst
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U2 - 10.1021/acsami.5c00484
DO - 10.1021/acsami.5c00484
M3 - Article
C2 - 40171662
AN - SCOPUS:105003089233
SN - 1944-8244
VL - 17
SP - 22665
EP - 22676
JO - ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces
JF - ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces
IS - 15
ER -