Steering deep CO2 reduction to C3+ hydrocarbons on nickel-based catalysts via ligand modification

Abstract

Electrochemical CO2 reduction is a promising approach to produce synthetic fuels and chemicals. Nickel-based catalysts have been shown to reduce CO2 toward long-chain hydrocarbons, whereas selectivity remains limited due to inefficient C–C coupling. We report a ligand-engineering strategy to modulate the electronic properties of a nickel hydroxide catalyst by surface cysteamine modification (Ni-OH-c) to boost the generation of C3+ hydrocarbons. Structural and compositional characterization showed that carbon-supported amorphous Ni(OH)2 nanosheets were reconstructed in situ into ultrasmall crystalline Ni(OH)2 nanoparticles. More importantly, surface cysteamine donates an electron to Ni(OH)2, thus increasing the surface electron density of Ni(OH)2 and creating interfacial Niδ+/Ni2+ sites. Electrochemical measurements showed that, compared with pristine Ni(OH)2, Ni-OH-c significantly promoted deep CO2 reduction and C–C coupling, presenting a C3+ hydrocarbons faradaic efficiency of 1.88% and a partial current density of 0.31 mA cm−2. We demonstrated stable C3+ hydrocarbon generation for over 13 h. In situ spectroscopic investigation revealed that cysteamine modification facilitated the adsorption of bridge-bonded *CO, which promoted *CO hydrogenation and enabled facile asymmetric *CO–COH coupling, thereby enabling the preferential generation of C3+ hydrocarbons. These findings offer an effective platform toward rational design of high-performance Ni-based non-Cu catalysts for selective synthesis of valuable long-chain feedstocks from direct CO2 reduction.

Graphical abstract: Steering deep CO2 reduction to C3+ hydrocarbons on nickel-based catalysts via ligand modification

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
08 Jan 2026
Accepted
16 Apr 2026
First published
01 May 2026

Sustainable Energy Fuels, 2026, Advance Article

Steering deep CO2 reduction to C3+ hydrocarbons on nickel-based catalysts via ligand modification

T. Wang, Y. Wang, F. Pan and K. Chen, Sustainable Energy Fuels, 2026, Advance Article , DOI: 10.1039/D6SE00029K

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