First-principles investigation of the electrocatalytic reduction of CO2 on zirconium-based single-, double-, and triple-atom catalysts anchored on a graphitic carbon nitride monolayer

TitleFirst-principles investigation of the electrocatalytic reduction of CO2 on zirconium-based single-, double-, and triple-atom catalysts anchored on a graphitic carbon nitride monolayer
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2022
AuthorsHassan, A, Anis, I, Shafi, S, Assad, A, Rasool, A, Khanam, R, Bhat, GAhmad, Krishnamurty, S, Dar, MAhmad
JournalACS Applied Nano Materials
Volume5
Issue10
Pagination15409-15417
Date PublishedOCT
Type of ArticleArticle
KeywordsC1 and C2 products, CO2 reduction, first-principles simulations, hydrogen evolution reaction, onset potential, single-atom catalysts (SACs), Zrn@C2N catalysts
Abstract

Conversion of carbon dioxide (CO2) with the help of an appropriate electrocatalyst with high stability, low onset potential, and exceptional selectivity is still one of the great tasks in the electrocatalytic reduction of CO2 to valuable chemicals. Herein, by means of systematic first-principles simulations, we investigate the CO2 reduction reaction (CO2RR) activity of zirconium-based single-, double-, and triple-atom (Zrn@C2N; n = 1-3) catalysts anchored on a graphitic carbon-nitride monolayer. In tune with the Sabatier principle, our results reveal that a moderate CO2 binding is vital for a low onset potential for the CO2RR. Consequently, based on rigorous free energy calculations, the Zr-based single-atom catalyst (SAC) is found to be most effective to convert CO2 to valuable products such as HCOOH and CH3OH. It is worth noting that CO2 reduction to HCOOH is spontaneous via the *HCOO intermediate on Zr1@C2N and involves a low onset potential of -0.23 V with respect to the reversible hydrogen electrode from the *COOH intermediate. Among all the catalysts evaluated computationally, the Zr SAC further reveals the lowest onset potential of -0.89 V for CH3OH formation. The results show that the Zr-based catalysts especially Zr1@C2N are found to effectively suppress the competitive hydrogen evolution reaction and promote the CO2RR. Moreover, all three catalysts exhibit high kinetic and thermal stability with negligible distortion due to which their structures can be retained very well up to 600 K. Thus, the current work may provide effective catalyst-design strategies for enhancing the electrocatalytic CO2RR performance of Zr-based materials.

DOI10.1021/acsanm.2c03464
Type of Journal (Indian or Foreign)

Foreign

Impact Factor (IF)

6.140

Divison category: 
Physical and Materials Chemistry
Database: 
Web of Science (WoS)

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