Abstract

AbstractDeveloping electrocatalysts for CO2 electroreduction with high activity and superior selectivity is extremely important and desirable from both academic and industrial perspectives. However, owing to competition with hydrogen evolution, highly efficient CO2 reduction is mostly achieved with high CO selectivity in a narrow potential range, which is incompatible with a large cell voltage required for industrial‐level CO2 reduction. Herein, we report an effective strategy to regulate CO2 reduction performances of single‐atom Ni electrocatalysts over a broad potential window by engineering their pore structures (micropores, mesopores, or hierarchical pores with both micropores and mesopores). It is revealed that hierarchically pores can significantly promote CO2 reduction efficiency of single‐atom Ni electrocatalysts. The hierarchically porous electrocatalyst achieves a maximum CO Faradaic efficiency (FECO) of 97.4% at −1.2 V (vs. RHE) and shows high FECO of >85% over a broad potential window from −0.7 to −1.7 V, much superior to electrocatalysts with other pore structures. More impressively, turnover frequency of the hierarchically porous electrocatalyst increases rapidly with increasing the applied potential and reaches 50,067 h−1 at −1.7 V. Such CO2 electroreduction promotion could be attributed to a synergistic effect of micropores for enhancing CO2 adsorption and mesopores for facilitating rapid release of product bubbles, which significantly improves CO2 reduction and suppresses hydrogen evolution.

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