Selective electrochemical reduction of carbon dioxide to ethanol via a relay catalytic platform†
Abstract
Efficient electroreduction of carbon dioxide (CO2) to ethanol is of great importance, but remains a challenge because it involves the transfer of multiple proton–electron pairs and carbon–carbon coupling. Herein, we report a CoO-anchored N-doped carbon material composed of mesoporous carbon (MC) and carbon nanotubes (CNT) as a catalyst for CO2 electroreduction. The faradaic efficiencies of ethanol and current density reached 60.1% and 5.1 mA cm−2, respectively. Moreover, the selectivity for ethanol products was extremely high among the products produced from CO2. A proposed mechanism is discussed in which the MC–CNT/Co catalyst provides a relay catalytic platform, where CoO catalyzes the formation of CO* intermediates which spill over to MC–CNT for carbon–carbon coupling to form ethanol. The high selectivity for ethanol is attributed mainly to the highly selective carbon–carbon coupling active sites on MC–CNT.