Abstract
Electrochemical CO2 reduction holds tremendous promise for transforming carbon dioxide into several value-added energy feedstocks and utilizing renewable energy sources. Herein, we have developed two novel copper-based organophosphonates for selective electrocatalytic conversion of CO2 to CH3OH conversion. The two-dimensional layer structure of Cu3[(Hhedp)2(C4H4N2)].2H2O (I) and the three-dimensional Cu3[(H3hedp)2(C4H4N2)4(SO4)].2H2O (II) have been isolated as single crystals via a hydrothermal strategy. Compound I consists of Cu2+ oxidation states exclusively, while compound II has Cu1+ oxidation states in a network wherein a Cu2+-phosphonate template is embedded inside the framework. Depending on mixed valent oxidation states, compound II exhibits high selectivity compared to compound I for the electrocatalytic reduction of CO2 to CH3OH (C1) as the primary product and CH3COOH (C2) as the secondary product. Notably, product selectivity is enhanced as the Faradaic efficiency (FE) of the competing hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) is significantly reduced in compound II relative to that of I, particularly at higher applied reduction potentials. The optimal ratio of Cu1+ active sites in compound II plays a pivotal role in enhancing methanol selectivity, stabilizing critical intermediates, and maintaining ideal reduction potentials as a noble-metal free electrocatalyst. Moreover, the optical band gap and the Mott-Schottky measurements further suggest the title Cu-phosphonate materials could be promising and effective photocatalysts.
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