Electronic Effects Determine the Selectivity of Planar Au–Cu Bimetallic Thin Films for Electrochemical CO2 Reduction
Author(s) -
Kai Liu,
Ming Ma,
Longfei Wu,
Marco Valenti,
Drialys Cárdenas-Morcoso,
Jan P. Hofmann,
Juan Bisquert,
Sixto Giménez,
Wilson A. Smith
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
acs applied materials and interfaces
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.535
H-Index - 228
eISSN - 1944-8252
pISSN - 1944-8244
DOI - 10.1021/acsami.9b01553
Subject(s) - bimetallic strip , materials science , selectivity , copper , fermi level , electronic structure , catalysis , hydroxide , electrochemistry , thin film , electronic effect , sputter deposition , analytical chemistry (journal) , sputtering , inorganic chemistry , electrode , nanotechnology , metal , chemistry , metallurgy , computational chemistry , biochemistry , physics , quantum mechanics , chromatography , electron
Au-Cu bimetallic thin films with controlled composition were fabricated by magnetron sputtering co-deposition, and their performance for the electrocatalytic reduction of CO 2 was investigated. The uniform planar morphology served as a platform to evaluate the electronic effect isolated from morphological effects while minimizing geometric contributions. The catalytic selectivity and activity of Au-Cu alloys was found to be correlated with the variation of electronic structure that was varied with tunable composition. Notably, the d-band center gradually shifted away from the Fermi level with increasing Au atomic ratio, leading to a weakened binding energy of *CO, which is consistent with low CO coverage observed in CO stripping experiments. The decrease in the *CO binding strength results in the enhanced catalytic activity for CO formation with the increase in Au content. In addition, it was observed that copper oxide/hydroxide species are less stable on Au-Cu surfaces compared to those on the pure Cu surface, where the surface oxophilicity could be critical to tuning the binding strength of *OCHO. These results imply that the altered electronic structure could explain the decreased formation of HCOO - on the Au-Cu alloys. In general, the formation of CO and HCOO - as main CO 2 reduction products on planar Au-Cu alloys followed the shift of the d-band center, which indicates that the electronic effect is the major governing factor for the electrocatalytic activity of CO 2 reduction on Au-Cu bimetallic thin films.
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