Abstract

The electrochemical reduction of CO2 is a promising method for sustainable, carbon-neutral chemical synthesis as well as the storage of intermittent renewable energy in the form of energy-dense fuels compatible with existing infrastructure. In this work, we investigated a pulsed-bias technique for CO2 reduction on Cu, which led to a major shift in the product selectivity relative to potentiostatic electrolysis conditions. With applied voltage pulses in the millisecond time regime, syngas (CO + H2) became the only product and had a pulse-time-dependent H2:CO molar ratio, ranging from ∼32:1 to 9:16 for pulse times between 10 and 80 ms, respectively, at the same applied working potential. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and X-ray diffraction (XRD) data suggested that in situ oxidation and reduction of the Cu partially caused the preference for CO formation over other carbon products on polycrystalline Cu. Significant nonfaradaic current arising from electrical double layer charging and discharging was...

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