Abstract

Cu-based metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) have attracted much attention for electrocatalytic CO2 reduction to high value-added chemicals, but they still suffer from low selectivity and instability. Here, an associative design strategy for the valence and coordination environment of the metal node in Cu-based MOFs is employed to regulate the CO2 electroreduction to ethylene. A novel "reduction-cleavage-recrystallization" method is developed to modulate the Cu(II)-Trimesic acid (BTC) framework to form a Cu(I)-BTC structure enriched with free carboxyl groups in the secondary coordination environment (SCE). In contrast to Cu(II)-BTC, the Cu(I)-BTC shows higher catalytic activity and better ethylene selectivity (≈2.2-fold) for CO2 electroreduction, which is further enhanced by increasing the content of free carboxyl groups, resulting in ethylene Faraday efficiency of up to 57% and the durability of the catalyst could last for 38h without performance decline. It indicates that the synergistic effect between Cu(I)-O coordinated structure and free carboxyl groups considerably enhances the dimerization of *CO intermediates and hinders the hydrogenation of *CO intermediates in these competitive pathways. This work unravels the strong dependence of CO2 electroreduction on the Cu valence state and coordination environment in MOFs and provides a platform for designing highly selective electrocatalytic CO2 reduction catalysts.

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