Precursor-regulated reconstruction of Cu-based catalysts for efficient electrocatalytic urea synthesis from CO2 and nitrate
Abstract
Electrocatalytic urea synthesis from CO2 and nitrate provides a sustainable route for coupling carbon utilization with nitrogen-waste upgrading under mild conditions. However, achieving scalable urea yields remains challenging due to the difficulty of synchronizing carbon- and nitrogen-containing intermediates on catalyst surfaces, particularly under practical conditions. Although Cu-based catalysts have been widely studied for C–N coupling, how precursor chemistry regulates their working-state reconstruction during electrolysis is still not well understood. Here, we systematically prepared two Cu-based catalysts enriched with basic surface groups (CO32−/OH−), Cu2(OH)2CO3 and Cu(OH)2, and investigated their nanoscale reconstruction pathways during electrocatalytic C–N coupling for urea synthesis. Hierarchically structured Cu2(OH)2CO3 delivered a urea yield of 63.20 mmol h−1 gcat.−1 with a faradaic efficiency of 16.21% at −0.9 V versus RHE, nearly twice that of Cu(OH)2. Quasi-in situ X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and X-ray absorption spectroscopy revealed that Cu2(OH)2CO3 follows a carbonate-regulated reconstruction distinct from that of Cu(OH)2 and maintains a broader mixed-valence working-state window composed of Cu2+, Cu+, and Cu0 during catalysis. In situ FTIR spectroscopy and density functional theory calculations further support a pathway in which CO2 is reduced to *CO on Cu+ sites, nitrate is reduced to *NH2 on Cu0 sites, and their interfacial coupling leads to urea formation. Furthermore, we validated the feasibility of Cu2(OH)2CO3 for electrocatalytic C–N coupling in an environmental scenario of food waste biological treatment. This work elucidates precursor-regulated reconstruction as an effective design principle for promoting selective C–N coupling and advancing more sustainable urea electrosynthesis in complex waste-derived environments.

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