Operando Electrochemical Spectroscopy for CO on Cu(100) at pH 1 to 13: Validation of Grand Canonical Potential Predictions
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Abstract
Electrochemical reduction of CO2 to value-added products is an attractive strategy to address issues of increasing atmospheric CO2 concentration. Cu is the only pure metal catalyst known to electrochemically convert CO2 to appreciable amounts of oxygenates and hydrocarbons such as C2H5OH, CH4, and C2H4, but the Faraday efficiencies are too low and the onset potentials are too high. To discover electrocatalytic systems better than Cu, we use in silico strategies based on new grand canonical potential (GCP) methods, but the complexity of the electrode–electrolyte interface makes it difficult to validate the accuracy of GCP. Operando electrochemical polarization-modulation infrared spectroscopy (PMIRS) provides a performance benchmark for theoretical tools that account for the vibrational stretching frequencies of surface-bound CO, νCO, as a function of pH and applied potential U. We show here that GCP calculations of the surface coverages of H*, OH*, and CO* on Cu(100) as a function of U lead to excellent predictions of the potential-dependent νCO and its shift with pH from 1 to 13. This validation justifies the use of GCP for predicting the performance of catalyst designs.
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