Five-fold twinned copper nanowire gas diffusion electrodes for electrochemical CO2 reduction with enhanced C2 product selectivity and stability
Abstract
Copper nanowires with fivefold twinned structures (t-CuNWs) are shown to be effective as cathode catalysts for the electrochemical CO2 reduction reaction (CO2RR) in a zero-gap electrolyzer to produce ethylene. The t-CuNWs, with surfaces enclosed by (100) facets, were selected for their enhanced CO adsorption strength, which along with the presence of the twin boundary defects, are proposed to promote C–C coupling—a key pathway toward multi-carbon (C2) products. We also find that the entangled t-CuNWs exhibit enhanced hydrophobicity when compared to commercial Cu nanoparticles (CuNPs), which reduces electrode flooding and contributes to enhance the stability of the cathode. These characteristics distinguish t-CuNWs from CuNPs in terms of activity (overpotential, selectivity) and stability. The t-CuNWs exhibited ∼40% C2H4 Faradaic efficiency (FE) for more than 4 hours under a current density of 100 mA cm−2, while commercial CuNPs exhibited ∼20% C2H4 FE for less than 4 hours and the CuNPs devices consistently required increased operating voltages. These findings highlight the potential of (100) faceted t-CuNWs for C2 product formation in CO2RR with facet engineering and hydrophobicity control.
- This article is part of the themed collection: Recent Open Access Articles
 

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