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Event

The role of the Electrode Surface in Solar-Driven Pyridine-Catalyzed CO2 Reduction

Wednesday, June 21, 2017 13:00to14:30
Maass Chemistry Building room 10, 801 rue Sherbrooke Ouest, Montreal, QC, H3A 0B8, CA
Price: 
FREE | EVERYONE WELCOME

The design of new technologies that shift U.S. power consumption away from fossil fuels toward sustainable alternatives must take into account the nation's large-scale need for stored chemical fuels. Photoelectrocatalytic CO2 reduction is one such technology, since it facilitates a process whereby solar energy is used to reduce CO2, a combustion product, into chemical fuels that are compatible with the existing U.S. energy infrastructure.

We report here on experimental studies of well-defined surfaces to investigate the role of the electrode surface in pyridine-catalyzed CO2Ìýreduction, which is reported to be associated with high yields for methanol and formic acid. Ambient pressure photoelectron spectroscopy (APPES) was used to spectroscopically identifyÌýin situÌýsurface-bound species formed by the interaction of water on GaP(110), the most stable surface of GaP, at pressures up to 1 Torr. The data show that the interaction with water is characterized by the presence of a partially dissociated adlayer, with Ga-OH, P-H, and adsorbed molecular H2O species detected on the surface. This is consistent with previously published theoretical work that predicts the presence of this layer. In addition, we used isobaric APPES measurements at elevated pressures to probe the thermal stabilities of adsorbed species as well as the oxidation of surface Ga and P. We observe the surface hydride to be remarkably stable in the presence of water, which is notable given the critical role of hydride transfer to catalysts and CO2Ìýduring chemical fuel synthesis reactions in aqueous environments. It is hypothesized that the high observed stability of the hydride on GaP may contribute to its associated remarkable near-100% faradaic efficiency for methanol generation by solar-driven CO2Ìýreduction. We have also obtained orbital-resolved information on the adsorption state of pyridine (C5H5N) on GaP(110) using scanning tunneling microscopy (STM). By examining the distribution of unoccupied molecular orbitals with high spatial and energetic resolution, we showed that scanning probe techniques can be used to positively identify the sites on pyridine susceptible to nucleophilic attack, consistent with frontier orbital theory. This technique can be used to explore the local reaction centers of adsorbed catalysts relevant to artificial photosynthesis. Our observations of the stable adsorption of both H and pyridine on this surface is notable, because it characterizes the proposed precursor state for the formation of adsorbed dihydropyridine, which could be a key hydride-shuttling catalyst for heterogeneous CO2Ìýreduction.

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