Fabricating penta-coordinated Fe single atoms for electrochemical CO2 reduction to syngas†
Abstract
The electrochemical reduction of CO2 (CO2RR) has recently attracted increasing attention for converting intermittent electric energy to chemical energy and reducing CO2 emission. Generally, various products including C1 and C2+ chemicals can be produced through CO2RR, and the selectivities of products are strongly determined by the structures of the active sites. In this work, we demonstrate that a penta-coordinated Fe single atom with N (Fe–N5/C) can serve as an efficient catalyst for CO2RR to syngas with tunable compositions. Detailed characterizations reveal that Fe atoms present as single atoms on a N-doped carbon support derived from the thermal treatment of zeolitic tetrazolate framework (ZTF). Specifically, each Fe single atom coordinates with five N atoms to form a pentahedral structure (Fe–N5). Theoretical calculations indicate that CO* desorption is energetically preferred, while CO2 activation to COOH* is the potential-limiting step for CO2RR on the Fe–N5/C surface, leading to an enhancement in CO2RR and suppression of hydrogen evolution reaction (HER). Consequently, the ratio of H2/CO ranges from 0.15 to 2.8 in the potential range of −0.5–−1.0 V when Fe–N5/C is used as the catalyst for CO2RR in 0.1 M KHCO3. This work reports a penta-coordinated Fe single atom for CO2RR to produce syngas with a tunable H2/CO ratio, which may promote the fundamental research on catalyst design for CO2RR.