Chemical origin of effective functionalization of single atom-MXene catalysts
Abstract
The chemical and atomic structures of Cu-, Ni-, or CuNi-embedded MXene (Ti3C2Tx, T = O or OH) nanosheet catalysts are examined by using various characterization methods to demonstrate the chemical origin of their composition-dependent evolution. The results of combined X-ray spectroscopy studies and the electrochemical test reveal that Cu ions in (Cu or CuNi):MXene remain active having a +1 valence and form metallic Cu–Cu bonds to enhance the catalytic activity for nitrate reduction. By contrast, Ni ions in (Ni or CuNi):MXene tend to remain bound to O as in Ni2+Ox staying inactive, and, furthermore, hinder the catalytic activity of Cu when co-doped on MXene. It is also demonstrated that chemistry of MXene itself varies by donating electrons from Ti2+/3+ to Cu2+ to stabilize the active Cu+ ions. These findings support a combinational mechanism in which both the abundant metallic bonds and the cooperative chemical reconstruction that happened via MXene-to-Cu charge transfer facilitate the single atom-aided functionalization of MXene catalysts.
- This article is part of the themed collection: Popular Advances

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