Getting insights into the edge effect of FeN4C catalysts on the electroreduction of CO to methane by density functional theory calculations†
Abstract
Isolated FeN4 atomically dispersed on graphene (FeN4C) has emerged as a versatile catalyst for the electrochemical carbon monoxide reduction reaction (CORR). However, there is still a lack of underlying understanding of the impact of the local coordination environment of FeN4 on CORR performance, particularly the intrinsic activity differences among various FeN4 sites. Herein, by using density functional theory, we investigated the electrocatalytic performance of FeN4 embedded in the interior, armchair- and zigzag-edges of carbon sheets for converting CO to valuable C1 products. The Gibbs free energy profile analyses along the possible reaction pathways identify that the armchair-edge FeN4 site (FeN4@A) exhibits the best catalytic activity and the highest CH4-selectivity through the *CHO key intermediate with the lowest free energy change of 0.31 eV. The corresponding kinetic analyses also confirm that FeN4@A possesses the fastest kinetic CORR activity with an activation barrier of 1.31 eV for the rate-determining step. In addition, the d-band center calculations suggest that the local environment of the FeN4 site can regulate the overlap of the d-orbitals of the center Fe and the p-orbitals of coordination N atoms to change the position of the d-band center relative to the Fermi level, which significantly affects the catalytic activity of the FeN4 site. The d-band center of FeN4@A is very close to the Fermi level in energy, indicating that the armchair-edge of graphene favors the FeN4 site to achieve the high CORR performance. These results provide insight into the relationship of electronic structure–catalytic activity of different-type FeN4C catalysts, which may guide the design of novel electrode materials with improved performances for achieving efficient multi-intermediate electrocatalysis.