Revealing CO<sub>2</sub> dissociation pathways at vicinal copper (997) interfaces

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Size- and shape-tailored copper (Cu) nanocrystals can offer vicinal planes for facile carbon dioxide (CO2) activation. Despite extensive reactivity benchmarks, a correlation between CO2 conversion and morphology structure has not yet been established at vicinal Cu interfaces. Herein, ambient pressure scanning tunneling microscopy reveals step-broken Cu nanocluster evolutions on the Cu(997) surface under 1 mbar CO2(g). The CO2 dissociation reaction produces carbon monoxide (CO) adsorbate and atomic oxygen (O) at Cu step-edges, inducing complicated restructuring of the Cu atoms to compensate for increased surface chemical potential energy at ambient pressure. The CO molecules bound at under-coordinated Cu atoms contribute to the reversible Cu clustering with the pressure gap effect, whereas the dissociated oxygen leads to irreversible Cu faceting geometries. Synchrotron-based ambient pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy identifies the chemical binding energy changes in CO-Cu complexes, which proves the characterized real-space evidence for the step-broken Cu nanoclusters under CO(g) environments. Our in situ surface observations provide a more realistic insight into Cu nanocatalyst designs for efficient CO2 conversion to renewable energy sources during C-1 chemical reactions.
Publisher
NATURE PORTFOLIO
Issue Date
2023-06
Language
English
Article Type
Article
Citation

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS, v.14, no.1

ISSN
2041-1723
DOI
10.1038/s41467-023-38928-1
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10203/314858
Appears in Collection
CH-Journal Papers(저널논문)
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