Nature Communications (Oct 2024)

Ligand engineering towards electrocatalytic urea synthesis on a molecular catalyst

  • Han Li,
  • Leitao Xu,
  • Shuowen Bo,
  • Yujie Wang,
  • Han Xu,
  • Chen Chen,
  • Ruping Miao,
  • Dawei Chen,
  • Kefan Zhang,
  • Qinghua Liu,
  • Jingjun Shen,
  • Huaiyu Shao,
  • Jianfeng Jia,
  • Shuangyin Wang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-52832-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Electrocatalytic C-N coupling from carbon dioxide and nitrate provides a sustainable alternative to the conventional energy-intensive urea synthetic protocol, enabling wastes upgrading and value-added products synthesis. The design of efficient and stable electrocatalysts is vital to promote the development of electrocatalytic urea synthesis. In this work, copper phthalocyanine (CuPc) is adopted as a modeling catalyst toward urea synthesis owing to its accurate and adjustable active configurations. Combining experimental and theoretical studies, it can be observed that the intramolecular Cu-N coordination can be strengthened with optimization in electronic structure by amino substitution (CuPc-Amino) and the electrochemically induced demetallation is efficiently suppressed, serving as the origination of its excellent activity and stability. Compared to that of CuPc (the maximum urea yield rate of 39.9 ± 1.9 mmol h−1 g−1 with 67.4% of decay in 10 test cycles), a high rate of 103.1 ± 5.3 mmol h−1 g−1 and remarkable catalytic durability have been achieved on CuPc-Amino. Isotope-labelling operando electrochemical spectroscopy measurements are performed to disclose reaction mechanisms and validate the C-N coupling processes. This work proposes a unique scheme for the rational design of molecular electrocatalysts for urea synthesis.