Publications

Journal articles

November 2016

Tuning of Silver Catalyst Mesostructure Promotes Selective Carbon Dioxide Conversion into Fuels

Youngmin Yoon, Anthony Shoji Hall, Yogesh Surendranath

Abstract

An electrode’s performance for catalytic CO2 conversion to fuels is a complex convolution of surface structure and transport effects. Using well-defined mesostructured silver inverse opal (Ag-IO) electrodes, it is demonstrated that mesostructure-induced transport limitations alone serve to increase the turnover frequency for CO2 activation per unit area, while simultaneously improving reaction selectivity. The specific activity for catalyzed CO evolution systematically rises by three-fold and the specific activity for catalyzed H2 evolution systematically declines by ten-fold with increasing mesostructural roughness of Ag-IOs. By exploiting the compounding influence of both of these effects, we demonstrate that mesostructure, rather than surface structure, can be used to tune CO evolution selectivity from less than 5 % to more than 80 %. These results establish electrode mesostructuring as a powerful complementary tool for tuning both catalyst selectivity and efficiency for CO2 conversion into fuels.

Acknowledgements

We thank Anna Wuttig and Bing Yan for helpful discussions. This research was supported by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research under AFOSR award FA9550‐15‐1‐0135 and by the MIT Department of Chemistry through junior faculty funds for Y.S. This work made use of Shared Experimental Facilities supported in part by the MRSEC Program of the National Science Foundation under award number DMR‐1419807.

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Professor
Department of Chemistry

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