Efficient electrochemical CO2 reduction to CO by metal and nitrogen co-doped carbon catalysts derived from pharmaceutical wastes adsorbed on commercial carbon nanotubes

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

2-1-2023

Department

Department of Materials Science and Engineering

Abstract

Transition metal and nitrogen doped carbon catalysts (M[sbnd]N[sbnd]C) are effective in electrochemical reduction of CO2 to CO with a high selectivity. However, scalable and cost-effective synthesis of active metal-nitrogen catalysts is yet to be developed. Herein, we report a simple and sustainable method that utilizes commercial carbon nanotubes (CNTs) to adsorb a pharmaceutical waste, sulfamethoxazole (SMX), followed by moderate pyrolysis to prepare an efficient M[sbnd]N[sbnd]C catalyst. The intrinsic metal impurities from CNTs are essential to form active metal sites, and it requires significantly less nitrogen precursor than methods using most widely nitrogen precursors such as melamine and urea. The CNT-SMX catalyst delivers high CO2RR performance with 91.5 % CO Faradaic efficiency and 14 mA/cm2 CO partial current density at −0.76 V vs RHE in a traditional H-Cell. The catalyst is also efficient in a scalable flow cell, exhibiting 97.5 % CO selectivity at 300 mA/cm2, plus stable CO2RR performance for more than 24 h at 100 mA/cm2. The scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) and X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) analyses confirm the existence of single atomic sites primarily in the form of Fe-N bonds that are active sites for CO2RR. Density functional theory (DFT) calculations suggest a synergy between the single atomic Fe[sbnd]N[sbnd]C sites and Ni nanoparticles embedded in the CNTs, which enhances CO production rate and selectivity by lowering the desorption energy of *CO intermediate. To the best of our knowledge, the results in this work are among the top performing carbon-based catalysts. Furthermore, catalysts developed in this work are synthesized at a moderate temperature without pre-oxidation or post-acid-washing and utilize cheap or waste materials, presenting a simple, sustainable, and cost-effective way to synthesize highly active catalysts.

Publication Title

Chemical Engineering Journal

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