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Abstract The role of oxygen vacancies in carbon dioxide electroreduction remains somewhat unclear. Here we construct a model of oxygen vacancies confined in atomic layer, taking the synthetic oxygen-deficient cobalt oxide single-unit-cell layers as an example. Density functional theory calculations demonstrate the main defect is the oxygen(II) vacancy, while X-ray absorption fine structure spectroscopy reveals their distinct oxygen vacancy concentrations. Proton transfer is theoretically/experimentally demonstrated to be a rate-limiting step, while energy calculations unveil that the presence of oxygen(II) vacancies lower the rate-limiting activation barrier from 0.51 to 0.40 eV via stabilizing the formate anion radical intermediate, confirmed by the lowered onset potential from 0.81 to 0.78 V and decreased Tafel slope from 48 to 37 mV dec −1 . Hence, vacancy-rich cobalt oxide single-unit-cell layers exhibit current densities of 2.7 mA cm −2 with ca. 85% formate selectivity during 40-h tests. This work establishes a clear atomic-level correlation between oxygen vacancies and carbon dioxide electroreduction.
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Shan Gao
Northwestern Polytechnical University
Zhongti Sun
Jiangsu University
Wei Liu
Guangdong University of Technology
Nature Communications
University of Science and Technology of China
Hefei National Center for Physical Sciences at Nanoscale
National Synchrotron Radiation Laboratory
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Gao et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a126ca4e407b2669634dd46 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms14503