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Interface Engineering of Earth-Abundant Transition Metals Using Boron Nitride for Selective Electroreduction of CO2
Author(s) -
Guoxiang Hu,
Zili Wu,
Sheng Dai,
Deen Jiang
Publication year - 2018
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.7b17600
Subject(s) - monolayer , materials science , transition metal , metal , boron nitride , density functional theory , hydrogen , hexagonal boron nitride , nitride , electrocatalyst , electron transfer , binding energy , catalysis , inorganic chemistry , nanotechnology , chemical physics , chemistry , computational chemistry , electrochemistry , electrode , graphene , atomic physics , organic chemistry , metallurgy , physics , layer (electronics)
Two-dimensional atomically thin hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN) monolayers have attracted considerable research interest. Given the tremendous progress in the synthesis of h-BN monolayers on transition metals and their potential as electrocatalysts, we investigate the electrocatalytic activities of h-BN/Ni, h-BN/Co, and h-BN/Cu interfaces for CO 2 reduction by the first-principles density functional theory. We find that with the h-BN monolayer on the metal, electrons transfer from the metal to the interface and accumulate under the B atoms. By calculating the binding energies of three key intermediates (H, HCOO, and COOH) for hydrogen evolution and CO 2 reduction, we find that H binding on the metal can be significantly weakened by the h-BN monolayer, preventing the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER). However, the binding strength of HCOO is strong on both the metal and h-BN/metal, especially for Ni and Co, promoting the CO 2 reduction channel. On the basis of the free-energy diagrams, we predict that h-BN/Ni and h-BN/Co will have very good electrocatalytic activities for CO 2 reduction to HCOOH, while the competitive HER channel is filtered out by the surface h-BN monolayer. Our study opens a new way for selective electroreduction of CO 2 via the interface engineering of the h-BN/metal system.

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