Efficient Electroreduction of CO2 to C1 and C2 Products Using Atomically Dispersed Boron N-C@Graphite Catalysts
Abstract
Atomically precise control of active sites is essential for advancing metal-free electrocatalysts for the CO₂ reduction reaction (CO₂RR). We report boron-and nitrogen-co-doped graphite (boron-N-C@graphite) derived from chloro-boron subphthalocyanine (Cl-B-SubPc), an aromatic macrocyclic precursor that directs simultaneous incorporation of B and N into conductive carbon frameworks. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy reveals the formation of B-C and B-N motifs alongside pyridinic and graphitic N, generating electron-deficient centers that modulate intermediate binding energies. The resulting catalysts display pronounced structure-activity correlations: pyrolysis at 800 °C favors formate and acetate formation, whereas 1000 °C yields a more graphitic catalyst with enhanced CO selectivity (Faradaic efficiency up to 26.9%). Mechanistic analysis indicates that the B-N synergy stabilizes *CO 2intermediates, suppresses hydrogen evolution, and enables C-C coupling. Both catalysts exhibit longterm stability (>180 h), and in zero-gap electrolyzers deliver industrially relevant current densities (150 mA cm⁻²) with CO Faradaic efficiencies of 79.0% and 87.4%, respectively. These findings establish B,N-co-doped carbons from molecular precursors as a versatile platform for elucidating active-site chemistry and for guiding the rational design of sustainable, high-performance CO₂RR catalysts.
- This article is part of the themed collections: Research advancing UN SDG 13: Climate Action, Research advancing UN SDG 12: Responsible consumption and production and Research advancing UN SDG 7: Affordable and clean energy