Abstract

Acidic CO2 electrolysis offers a promising strategy to achieve high carbon utilization and high energy efficiency. However, challenges remain in suppressing the competitive hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) and improving product selectivity. High concentrations of potassium ions (K+) can suppress HER and accelerate CO2 reduction, but they still inevitably suffer from salt precipitation problems. In this study, we demonstrate that the sulfonate-based polyelectrolyte, polystyrene sulfonate (PSS), enables to reconstruct the electrode-electrolyte interface to significantly enhance the acidic CO2 electrolysis. Mechanistic studies reveal that PSS induces high local K+ concentrations through electrostatic interaction between PSS anions and K+. In situ spectroscopy reveals that PSS reshapes the interfacial hydrogen-bond (H-bond) network, which is attributed to the H-bonds between PSS anions and hydrated proton as well as the steric hindrance of the additive molecules. This greatly weakens proton transfer kinetics and leads to the suppression of undesirable HER. As a result, a Faradaic efficiency of 93.9% for CO can be achieved at 250 mA cm-2, simultaneous with a high single-pass carbon efficiency of 72.2% on commercial Ag catalysts in acid. This study highlights the important role of the electrode-electrolyte interface induced by polyelectrolyte additives in promoting electrocatalytic reactions.

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