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Pyridinium has been shown to be a cocatalyst for the electrochemical reduction of CO2 on metal and semiconductor electrodes, but its exact role has been difficult to elucidate. In this work, we create cooperative cobalt-protoporphyrin (CoPP) and pyridine/pyridinium (py/pyH+) catalytic sites on metal-organic layers (MOLs) for an electrocatalytic CO2 reduction reaction (CO2RR). Constructed from Hf6(μ3-O)4(μ3-OH)4(HCO2)6 secondary building units (SBUs) and terpyridine-based tricarboxylate ligands, the MOL was postsynthetically functionalized with CoPP via carboxylate exchange with formate capping groups. The CoPP group and the pyridinium (pyH+) moiety on the MOL coactivate CO2 by forming the pyH+--O2C-CoPP adduct, which enhances the CO2RR and suppresses hydrogen evolution to afford a high CO/H2 selectivity of 11.8. Cooperative stabilization of the pyH+--O2C-CoPP intermediate led to a catalytic current density of 1314 mA/mgCo for CO production at -0.86 VRHE, which corresponds to a turnover frequency of 0.4 s-1.
Guo et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
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