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Published October 4, 2023 | Published
Journal Article Open

CO₂ Reduction to Methane and Ethylene on a Single-Atom Catalyst: A Grand Canonical Quantum Mechanics Study

  • 1. ROR icon California Institute of Technology

Abstract

In recent years, two-dimensional metal–organic frameworks (2D MOF) have attracted great interest for their ease of synthesis and for their catalytic activities and semiconducting properties. The appeal of these materials is that they are layered and easily exfoliated to obtain a monolayer (or few layer) material with interesting optoelectronic properties. Moreover, they have great potential for CO₂ reduction to obtain solar fuels with more than one carbon atom, such as ethylene and ethanol, in addition to methane and methanol. In this paper, we explore how a particular class of 2D MOF based on a phthalocyanine core provides the reactive center for the production of ethylene and ethanol. We examine the reaction mechanism using the new grand canonical potential kinetics (GCP-K) or grand canonical quantum mechanics (GC-QM) computational methodology, which obtains reaction rates at constant applied potential to compare directly with experimental results (rather than at constant electrons as in standard QM). We explain the reaction mechanism underlying the formation of methane and ethylene. Here, the key reaction step is direct coupling of CO into CHO, without the usual rate-determining CO–CO dimerization step observed on Cu metal surfaces. Indeed, the 2D MOF behaves like a single-atom catalyst.

Copyright and License

© 2022 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society. This publication is licensed under CC-BY 4.0.

 

Acknowledgement

S.O. thanks the "Excellence Initiative–Research University" (IDUB) Program, Action I.3.3–"Establishment of the Institute for Advanced Studies (IAS)" for funding (grant No. UW/IDUB/2020/25) and the Polish National Agency for Academic Exchange under the Bekker program (grant No. PPN/BEK/2020/1/00053/U/00001). This project was cofinanced through funding from the University of Warsaw under the "Excellence Initiative–Research University" (IDUB) Programme "Tandems for Excellence." This research was carried out with the support of the Interdisciplinary Center for Mathematical and Computational Modeling at the University of Warsaw (ICM UW) under grant Nos. G83-28 and GB80-24. WAG thanks the Liquid Sunlight Alliance, which is supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, and Fuels from Sunlight Hub under Award Number DE-SC0021266, for supporting the Caltech expenses.

Conflict of Interest

The authors declare no competing financial interest.

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Additional details

Created:
October 19, 2023
Modified:
October 31, 2023