Nature Communications (Mar 2025)

Atomically dispersed cerium on copper tailors interfacial water structure for efficient CO-to-acetate electroreduction

  • Xue-Peng Yang,
  • Zhi-Zheng Wu,
  • Ye-Cheng Li,
  • Shu-Ping Sun,
  • Yu-Cai Zhang,
  • Jing-Wen Duanmu,
  • Pu-Gan Lu,
  • Xiao-Long Zhang,
  • Fei-Yue Gao,
  • Yu Yang,
  • Ye-Hua Wang,
  • Peng-Cheng Yu,
  • Shi-Kuo Li,
  • Min-Rui Gao

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-58109-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Abstract Electrosynthesis of acetate from carbon monoxide (CO) powered by renewable electricity offers one promising avenue to obtain valuable carbon-based products but undergoes unsatisfied selectivity because of the competing hydrogen evolution reaction. We report here a cerium single atoms (Ce-SAs) modified crystalline-amorphous dual-phase copper (Cu) catalyst, in which Ce SAs reduce the electron density of the dual-phase Cu, lowering the proportion of interfacial K+ ion hydrated water (K·H2O) and thereby decreasing the H* coverage on the catalyst surface. Meanwhile, the electron transfer from dual-phase Cu to Ce SAs yields Cu+ species, which boost the formation of active atop-adsorbed *CO (COatop), improving COatop-COatop coupling kinetics. These together lead to the preferential pathway of ketene intermediate (*CH2-C=O) formation, which then reacts with OH- enriched by pulsed electrolysis to generate acetate. Using this catalyst, we achieve a high Faradaic efficiency of 71.3 ± 2.1% toward acetate and a time-averaged acetate current density of 110.6 ± 2.0 mA cm−2 under a pulsed electrolysis mode. Furthermore, a flow-cell reactor assembled by this catalyst can produce acetate steadily for at least 138 hours with selectivity greater than 60%.