Heterometallic Transition Metal Oxides Containing Lewis Acids as Molecular Catalysts for the Reduction of Carbon Dioxide to Carbon Monoxide with Bimodal Activity

Dima Azaiza-Dabbah, Fei Wang, Elias Haddad, Albert Solé-Daura, Raanan Carmieli, Josep M. Poblet, Charlotte Vogt, Ronny Neumann*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

3 Scopus citations

Abstract

Electrocatalytic CO2 reduction (e-CO2RR) to CO is replete with challenges including the need to carry out e-CO2RR at low overpotentials. Previously, a tricopper-substituted polyoxometalate was shown to reduce CO2 to CO with a very high faradaic efficiency albeit at −2.5 V versus Fc/Fc+. It is now demonstrated that introducing a nonredox metal Lewis acid, preferably GaIII, as a binding site for CO2 in the first coordination sphere of the polyoxometalate, forming heterometallic polyoxometalates, e.g., [SiCuIIFeIIIGaIII(H2O)3W9O37]8-, leads to bimodal activity optimal both at −2.5 and −1.5 V versus Fc/Fc+; reactivity at −1.5 V being at an overpotential of ∼150 mV. These results were observed by cyclic voltammetry and quantitative controlled potential electrolysis where high faradaic efficiency and chemoselectivity were obtained at −2.5 and −1.5 V. A reaction with 13CO2 revealed that CO2 disproportionation did not occur at −1.5 V. EPR spectroscopy showed reduction, first of CuII to CuI and FeIII to FeII and then reduction of a tungsten atom (WVI to WV) in the polyoxometalate framework. IR spectroscopy showed that CO2 binds to [SiCuIIFeIIIGaIII(H2O)3W9O37]8- before reduction. In situ electrochemical attenuated total reflection surface-enhanced infrared absorption spectroscopy (ATR-SEIRAS) with pulsed potential modulated excitation revealed different observable intermediate species at −2.5 and −1.5 V. DFT calculations explained the CV, the formation of possible activated CO2 species at both −2.5 and −1.5 V through series of electron transfer, proton-coupled electron transfer, protonation and CO2 binding steps, the active site for reduction, and the role of protons in facilitating the reactions.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)27871-27885
Number of pages15
JournalJournal of the American Chemical Society
Volume146
Issue number40
DOIs
StatePublished - 9 Oct 2024
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

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© 2024 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society.

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