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R. Kas

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Continued advancements in the electrochemical reduction of CO 2 (CO 2RR) have emphasized that reactivity,selectivity, and stability are not explicit material properties butcombined effects of the catalyst, double-layer, reaction environ-
ment, and system configuration. These realizations have steadily built upon the foundational work performed for a broad array of transition metals performed at 5 mA cm−2, which historically guided the research field. To encompass the changing advancements and mindset within the research field, an updated baseline at elevated current densities could then be of value. Here we seek to
re-characterize the activity, selectivity, and stability of the five most utilized transition metal catalysts for CO2 RR (Ag, Au, Pd, Sn, and Cu) at elevated reaction rates through electrochemical operation, physical characterization, and varied operating parameters to provide a renewed resource and point of comparison. As a basis, we have employed a common cell architecture, highly controlled catalyst layer morphologies and thicknesses, and fixed current densities. Through a dataset of 88 separate experiments, we provide comparisons between CO-producing catalysts (Ag, Au, and Pd), highlighting CO-limiting current densities on Au and Pd at 72 and 50 mA cm−2, respectively. We further show the instability of Sn in highly alkaline environments, and the convergence of product selectivity at elevated current densities for a Cu catalyst in neutral andalkaline media. Lastly, we reflect upon the use and limits of reaction rates as a baseline metric by comparing catalytic selectivity at 10
versus 200 mA cm−2. We hope the collective work provides a resource for researchers setting up CO 2RR experiments for the first time. ...
Electrochemical CO2 reduction has received an increased amount of interest in the last decade as a promising avenue for storing renewable electricity in chemical bonds. Despite considerable progress on catalyst performance using nanostructured electrodes, the sensitivity of the reaction to process conditions has led to debate on the origin of the activity and high selectivity. Additionally, this raises questions on the transferability of the performance and knowledge to other electrochemical systems. At its core, the discrepancy is primarily a result of the highly porous nature of nanostructured electrodes, which are vulnerable to both mass transport effects and structural changes during the electrolysis. Both effects are not straightforward to identify and difficult to decouple. Despite the susceptibility of nanostructured electrodes to mass transfer limitations, we highlight that nanostructured silver electrodes exhibit considerably higher activity when normalized to the electrochemically active surface in contrast to gold and copper electrodes. Alongside, we provide a discussion on how active surface area and thickness of the catalytic layer itself can influence the onset potential, selectivity, stability, activity and mass transfer inside and outside of the three dimensional catalyst layer. Key parameters and potential solutions are highlighted to decouple mass transfer effects from the measured activity in electrochemical cells utilizing CO2 saturated aqueous solutions. ...
Journal article (2020) - Elizabeth R. Corson, Recep Kas, Robert Kostecki, Jeffrey J. Urban, Wilson A. Smith, Bryan D. McCloskey, Ruud Kortlever
Illumination of a voltage-biased plasmonic Ag cathode during CO2 reduction results in a suppression of the H2 evolution reaction while enhancing CO2 reduction. This effect has been shown to be photonic rather than thermal, but the exact plasmonic mechanism is unknown. Here, we conduct an in situ ATR-SEIRAS (attenuated total reflectance-surface-enhanced infrared absorption spectroscopy) study of a sputtered thin film Ag cathode on a Ge ATR crystal in CO2-saturated 0.1 M KHCO3 over a range of potentials under both dark and illuminated (365 nm, 125 mW cm-2) conditions to elucidate the nature of this plasmonic enhancement. We find that the onset potential of CO2 reduction to adsorbed CO on the Ag surface is -0.25 VRHE and is identical in the light and the dark. As the production of gaseous CO is detected in the light near this onset potential but is not observed in the dark until -0.5 VRHE, we conclude that the light must be assisting the desorption of CO from the surface. Furthermore, the HCO3- wavenumber and peak area increase immediately upon illumination, precluding a thermal effect. We propose that the enhanced local electric field that results from the localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR) is strengthening the HCO3- bond, further increasing the local pH. This would account for the decrease in H2 formation and increase the CO2 reduction products in the light. ...
Journal article (2019) - Kailun Yang, Recep Kas, Wilson A. Smith
Over the past decade, electrochemical carbon dioxide reduction has become a thriving area of research with the aim of converting electricity to renewable chemicals and fuels. Recent advances through catalyst development have significantly improved selectivity and activity. However, drawing potential dependent structure-activity relationships has been complicated, not only due to the ill-defined and intricate morphological and mesoscopic structure of electrocatalysts, but also by immense concentration gradients existing between the electrode surface and bulk solution. In this work, by using in situ surface enhanced infrared absorption spectroscopy (SEIRAS) and computational modeling, we explicitly show that commonly used strong phosphate buffers cannot sustain the interfacial pH during CO2 electroreduction on copper electrodes at relatively low current densities, <10 mA/cm2. The pH near the electrode surface was observed to be as much as 5 pH units higher compared to bulk solution in 0.2 M phosphate buffer at potentials relevant to the formation of hydrocarbons (-1 V vs RHE), even on smooth polycrystalline copper electrodes. Drastically increasing the buffer capacity did not stand out as a viable solution for the problem as the concurrent production of hydrogen increased dramatically, which resulted in a breakdown of the buffer in a narrow potential range. These unforeseen results imply that most of the studies, if not all, on electrochemical CO2 reduction to hydrocarbons in CO2 saturated aqueous solutions were evaluated under mass transport limitations on copper electrodes. We underscore that the large concentration gradients on electrodes with high local current density (e.g., nanostructured) have important implications on the selectivity, activity, and kinetic analysis, and any attempt to draw structure-activity relationships must rule out mass transport effects. ...
Review (2019) - Recep Kas, Onagie Ayemoba, Nienke J. Firet, Joost Middelkoop, Wilson A. Smith, Angel Cuesta
The field of electrochemical CO2 conversion is undergoing significant growth in terms of the number of publications and worldwide research groups involved. Despite improvements of the catalytic performance, the complex reaction mechanisms and solution chemistry of CO2 have resulted in a considerable amount of discrepancies between theoretical and experimental studies. A clear identification of the reaction mechanism and the catalytic sites are of key importance in order to allow for a qualitative breakthrough and, from an experimental perspective, calls for the use of in-situ or operando spectroscopic techniques. In-situ infrared spectroscopy can provide information on the nature of intermediate species and products in real time and, in some cases, with relatively high time resolution. In this contribution, we review key theoretical aspects of infrared reflection spectroscopy, followed by considerations of practical implementation. Finally, recent applications to the electrocatalytic reduction of CO2 are reviewed, including challenges associated with the detection of reaction intermediates. ...
CO 2 electroreduction is a promising technology to produce chemicals and fuels from renewable resources. Polycrystalline and nanostructured metals have been tested extensively while less effort has been spent on understanding the performance of bimetallic alloys. In this work, we study compositionally variant, smooth Au-Pd thin film alloys to discard any morphological or mesoscopic effect on the electrocatalytic performance. We find that the onset potential of CO formation exhibits a strong dependence on the Pd content of the alloys. Strikingly, palladium, a hydrogen evolution catalyst with reasonable exchange current density, suppresses hydrogen evolution when alloyed with gold in the presence of CO 2 . Cyclic voltammetry, in situ surface enhanced infrared absorption spectroscopy, and potential-dependent online product analysis strongly suggest that by alloying Au with Pd a significant increase in the surface coverage of adsorbed CO occurs with increasing Pd content at low overpotentials (e.g., approximately -0.35 V vs RHE). Such an increase in CO coverage suppresses H 2 evolution due to the lack of vacant active sites. Moreover, the overall increase in the binding energy with the CO 2 intermediates gained with the addition of Pd increases the CO production at low overpotentials, where polycrystalline Au suffers from poor CO 2 adsorption and poor selectivity for CO production. These results show that promising CO 2 reduction electrode materials (e.g., Au) can be alloyed not only to tune the catalyst's activity but also to deliberately decrease the availability of surface sites for competitive H 2 evolution. ...
Journal article (2018) - Ming Ma, Kai Liu, Jie Shen, Recep Kas, Wilson A. Smith
In this work, the highly selective and stable electrocatalytic reduction of CO2 to CO on nanostructured Ag electrocatalysts is presented. The Ag electrocatalysts are synthesized by the electroreduction of Ag2CO3 formed by in situ anodic-etching of Ag foil in a KHCO3 electrolyte. After 3 min of this etching treatment, the Ag2CO3-derived nanostructured Ag electrocatalysts are capable of producing CO with up to 92% Faradaic efficiency at an overpotential as low as 290 mV, which surpasses all of the reported Ag catalysts at identical conditions to date. In addition, the anodic-etched Ag retained ∼90% catalytic selectivity in the electroreduction of CO2 to CO for more than 100 h. The Ag2CO3-derived Ag is able to facilitate the activation of CO2 via reduction of the activation energy barrier of the initial electron transfer and provide an increased number of active sites, resulting in the dramatically improved catalytic activity for the reduction of CO2 to CO. ...