The Mechanism of CO2 Electroreduction to Multi- carbon Products over Iron Phthalocyanine Single-Atom Catalyst

08 December 2023, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Carbon dioxide reduction reaction (CO2 RR) is a promising method for converting CO2 into value-added products. CO2 RR over single atom catalysts (SAC) is widely known to result in chemical compounds such as carbon monoxide and formic acid that contain only one carbon atom (C1). Indeed, at least two active sites are commonly believed to be required for C-C coupling to synthesize compounds such as ethanol and propylene (C2+ ) from CO2 . However, experimental evidence suggests that Iron Phthalocyanine (PcFe), which possesses only a single metal center, can produce a trace amount of C2+ products. To the best of our knowledge, the mechanism by which C2+ products are formed over a SAC such as PcFe is still unknown. Using density functional theory (DFT), we analyzed the mechanism of CO2 RR to C1 and C2+ products over PcFe. Due to the high concentration of bicarbonate at pH=7, CO2 RR competes with HCO3 – reduction. Our computations indicate, that bicarbonate reduction is significantly more favourable. However, the rate of this reaction is influenced by H3 O+ concentration. For the formation of C2+ products, our computations reveals that C-C coupling proceeds through the reaction between in-situ formed CO and PcFe("0")-CH2 or PcFe("-I")-CH2 intermediates. This reaction step is highly exergonic and requires only low activation energies of 0.44 eV and 0.24 eV for PcFe("0")-CH2 and PcFe("-I")-CH2 . The DFT results, in line with experimental evidence, suggest that C2+ compounds are produced over PcFe at low potentials whereas CH4 is still the main post-CO product.

Keywords

CO2 reduction
DFT modelling
Phthalocyanines
Homogeneous catalysis
Electrocatalysis
Electrochemistry

Supplementary materials

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Supplementary Information
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Summary of all total energies, the considered spin states and all considered structures. Additional considered reaction mechanisms not described in the main manuscript.
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