Abstract

Electrochemical carbon dioxide (CO2) reduction with bismuth-based catalysts has been widely investigated in the recent few years. This is due to bismuth’s ability to perform selective electrochemical CO2 reduction reaction (eCO2RR) to an important C1 product, the formate (HCOO–). However, boosting the performance of such catalysts is a continuous investigation. In this work, enhancing the active sites for eCO2RR is investigated by forming nanocomposites with graphitic carbon nitride (g-C3N4). BiOCl is synthesized by a simple wet-chemical approach in the presence of glycine as size-controlling agent and formed into nanocomposites, which were characterized by Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM), X-ray diffraction (XRD), Raman spectroscopy, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), Infrared (IR) Spectroscopy and N2 physisorption. Linear Sweep Voltammetry (LSV) in argon and CO2-saturated atmosphere showed higher current values in the case of CO2. Chronoamperometries (CA) were recorded at −1.06 V vs Reversible Hydrogen Electrode (RHE) for 5400 s obtaining Faradic Efficiencies (FE) varying in the range of 70–77 % depending on the nanocomposites’ composition. In fact, 52.1 wt% BiOCl/g-C3N4 formed the highest yields for formate (with also the highest rate of formation of formate) together with a minimal production of H2 and CO. The effect of nano-structuration induced by glycine, used as a size-controlling agent, to form nanoplates was crucial: microplates of BiOCl produced without glycine showed an FE of 4 %, reaching 85 % in the case of the nanoplates. Post-electrocatalysis characterization revealed the possible role of Bi2O2CO3 as the active phase for eCO2RR.

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