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Published December 3, 2015 | Published + Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

Free-Energy Barriers and Reaction Mechanisms for the Electrochemical Reduction of CO on the Cu(100) Surface, Including Multiple Layers of Explicit Solvent at pH 0

Abstract

The great interest in the photochemical reduction from CO_2 to fuels and chemicals has focused attention on Cu because of its unique ability to catalyze formation of carbon-containing fuels and chemicals. A particular goal is to learn how to modify the Cu catalysts to enhance the production selectivity while reducing the energy requirements (overpotential). To enable such developments, we report here the free-energy reaction barriers and mechanistic pathways on the Cu(100) surface, which produces only CH_4 (not C_2H_4 or CH_3OH) in acid (pH 0). We predict a threshold potential for CH_4 formation of −0.52 V, which compares well to experiments at low pH, −0.45 to −0.50 V. These quantum molecular dynamics simulations included ∼5 layers of explicit water at the water/electrode interface using enhanced sampling methodology to obtain the free energies. We find that that chemisorbed hydroxyl-methylene (CH–OH) is the key intermediate determining the selectivity for methane over methanol.

Additional Information

© 2015 American Chemical Society. This is an open access article published under an ACS AuthorChoice License, which permits copying and redistribution of the article or any adaptations for non-commercial purposes. Received: October 8, 2015; Accepted: November 12, 2015; Published: November 12, 2015. This work was initiated with support from National Science Foundation (CHE 1512759 and completed with support by the Joint Center for Artificial Photosynthesis, a DOE Energy Innovation Hub, supported through the Office of Science of the U.S. Department of Energy under Award DE-SC0004993. We thank Dr. Robert J. Nielsen, Dr. Manny Soriaga, and Ms. Yufeng Huang for helpful discussions. The authors declare no competing financial interest.

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Published - acs.jpclett.5b02247.pdf

Supplemental Material - jz5b02247_si_001.pdf

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