Baowen Zhou, Yongjin Ma, Pengfei Ou, Zhengwei Ye, Xiao-Yan Li, Srinivas Vanka, Tao Ma, Haiding Sun, Ping Wang, Peng Zhou, Jason K. Cooper, Yixin Xiao, Ishtiaque Ahmed Navid, Jun Pan, Jun Song, Zetian Mi
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Generation of C2+ compounds from sunlight, carbon dioxide and water provides a promising path for carbon neutrality. Central to the construction of a rational artificial photosynthesis integrated device is the requirement for a catalyst to break the bottleneck of C–C coupling. Here, based on operando spectroscopy measurements, theoretical calculations and feedstock experiments, it is discovered that gold, in conjunction with iridium, can catalyse the reduction of CO2, achieving C–C coupling by insertion of CO2 into –CH3. Due to a combination of optoelectronic and catalytic properties, the assembly of AuIr with InGaN nanowires on silicon enables the achievement of a C2H6 activity of 58.8 mmol g−1 h−1 with a turnover number of 54,595 over 60 h. A light-to-fuel efficiency of ~0.59% for solar fuel production from CO2 and H2O is achieved without any other energy inputs. This work provides a carbon-negative path for producing higher-order carbon compounds. Producing valuable chemicals from carbon dioxide, water and sunlight through artificial conversion schemes remains a challenging and ambitious goal in photocatalysis. Here, the authors introduce an effective approach for the synthesis of C2+ compounds using a binary AuIr catalyst in combination with InGaN nanowires.
期刊介绍:
Nature Catalysis serves as a platform for researchers across chemistry and related fields, focusing on homogeneous catalysis, heterogeneous catalysis, and biocatalysts, encompassing both fundamental and applied studies. With a particular emphasis on advancing sustainable industries and processes, the journal provides comprehensive coverage of catalysis research, appealing to scientists, engineers, and researchers in academia and industry.
Maintaining the high standards of the Nature brand, Nature Catalysis boasts a dedicated team of professional editors, rigorous peer-review processes, and swift publication times, ensuring editorial independence and quality. The journal publishes work spanning heterogeneous catalysis, homogeneous catalysis, and biocatalysis, covering areas such as catalytic synthesis, mechanisms, characterization, computational studies, nanoparticle catalysis, electrocatalysis, photocatalysis, environmental catalysis, asymmetric catalysis, and various forms of organocatalysis.