Impact of palladium/palladium hydride conversion on electrochemical CO2 reduction via in-situ transmission electron microscopy and diffraction

Ahmed M. Abdellah, Fatma Ismail, Oliver W. Siig, Jie Yang, Carmen M. Andrei, Liza Anastasia DiCecco, Amirhossein Rakhsha, Kholoud E. Salem, Kathryn Grandfield, Nabil Bassim, Robert Black, Georg Kastlunger*, Leyla Soleymani, Drew Higgins*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Abstract

Electrochemical conversion of CO2 offers a sustainable route for producing fuels and chemicals. Pd-based catalysts are effective for converting CO2 into formate at low overpotentials and CO/H2 at high overpotentials, while undergoing poorly understood morphology and phase structure transformations under reaction conditions that impact performance. Herein, in-situ liquid-phase transmission electron microscopy and select area diffraction measurements are applied to track the morphology and Pd/PdHx phase interconversion under reaction conditions as a function of electrode potential. These studies identify the degradation mechanisms, including poisoning and physical structure changes, occurring in PdHx/Pd electrodes. Constant potential density functional theory calculations are used to probe the reaction mechanisms occurring on the PdHx structures observed under reaction conditions. Microkinetic modeling reveals that the intercalation of *H into Pd is essential for formate production. However, the change in electrochemical CO2 conversion selectivity away from formate and towards CO/H2 at increasing overpotentials is due to electrode potential dependent changes in the reaction energetics and not a consequence of morphology or phase structure changes.

Original languageEnglish
Article number938
JournalNature Communications
Volume15
Issue number1
Number of pages15
ISSN2041-1723
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024

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