Multiscale X-ray scattering elucidates activation and deactivation of oxide-derived copper electrocatalysts for CO2 reduction

Publication date

2025-01-03

Authors

de Ruiter, JimISNI 0000000506363301
Benning, V. R.M.ISNI 000000051777582X
Yang, ShuangISNI 0000000492960526
den Hartigh, B. J.
Wang, Hui
Prins, P. TimISNI 0000000492529218
Dorresteijn, J. M.ISNI 0000000492853050
Janssens, Joris C.L.ISNI 0000000506769467
Manna, G.
Petoukhov, AndreiORCID 0000-0001-9840-6014ISNI 0000000389991404

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Advisors

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Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by_nc_nd

Abstract

Electrochemical reduction of carbon dioxide (CO2) into sustainable fuels and base chemicals requires precise control over and understanding of activity, selectivity and stability descriptors of the electrocatalyst under operation. Identification of the active phase under working conditions, but also deactivation factors after prolonged operation, are of the utmost importance to further improve electrocatalysts for electrochemical CO2 conversion. Here, we present a multiscale in situ investigation of activation and deactivation pathways of oxide-derived copper electrocatalysts under CO2 reduction conditions. Using well-defined Cu2O octahedra and cubes, in situ X-ray scattering experiments track morphological changes at small scattering angles and phase transformations at wide angles, with millisecond to second time resolution and ensemble-scale statistics. We find that undercoordinated active sites promote CO2 reduction products directly after Cu2O to Cu activation, whereas less active planar surface sites evolve over time. These multiscale insights highlight the dynamic and intimate relationship between electrocatalyst structure, surface-adsorbed molecules, and catalytic performance, and our in situ X-ray scattering methodology serves as an additional tool to elucidate the factors that govern electrocatalyst (de)stabilization.

Keywords

Electrochemical co2, Electrodes, Operando, Saxs, General Chemistry, General Biochemistry,Genetics and Molecular Biology, General Physics and Astronomy, SDG 7 - Affordable and Clean Energy, SDG 13 - Climate Action

Citation

de Ruiter, J, Benning, V R M, Yang, S, den Hartigh, B J, Wang, H, Prins, P T, Dorresteijn, J M, Janssens, J C L, Manna, G, Petukhov, A V, Weckhuysen, B M, Rabouw, F T & van der Stam, W 2025, 'Multiscale X-ray scattering elucidates activation and deactivation of oxide-derived copper electrocatalysts for CO 2 reduction', Nature Communications, vol. 16, no. 1, 373. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-55742-5