2016 AIChE Annual Meeting
(343g) Influence of Alloying on CO2 Electroreduction on Ag-Zn System
Authors
Alloys, which can provide bifunctional sites that selectively stabilize intermediates, are a promising class of materials, and a large amount of effort has been focused on the investigation of their effectiveness as CO2 reduction catalysts. Recent works have reported on improved CO2 reduction activity and selectivity on alloy systems, which were attributed to the synergy between the two metal atoms at the surface. However, most improvements reported in these works are pertaining to two-electron products, and alloy systems that demonstrate improvements for > 2 e- products remain elusive.
Here, we report on the investigation of polycrystalline AgZn foil, which resulted in the observation of enhanced activities and selectivities for methane and methanol productions compared to Ag and Zn foils. Although CO is the main CO2 reduction product as expected of an alloy between two metals active for CO production, the selective enhancement observed for the > 2 e- products is noteworthy, as it indicates that alloys are promising candidates in the development of effective CO2 electroreduction catalysts. The production of CO as major product is explained by the binding energies of intermediates, and the importance of optimal binding energies are discussed.
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