Electronic regulation of Ni single atom by confined Ni nanoparticles for fast and energy-efficient CO2 electroreduction
Abstract Electrocatalytic CO2 to CO conversion is approaching the industrial benchmark. Currently, Au electrodes show the best performance, whereas non-precious metal catalysts exhibit inferior activity. Here we show a densely populated Ni single-atom on nanoparticle catalyst (NiSA/NP) via direct solid-sate pyrolysis, where Ni nanoparticles donate electrons to Ni(i)-N-C sites via carbon nanotubes network, achieves a high CO current of 352 mA cm−2 at -0.55 V vs RHE in an alkaline flow cell. When coupled with a NiFe-based oxygen evolution anode into a zero-gap membrane electrolyser, it delivers an industrial-relevant CO current of 310 mA cm−2 at a low cell voltage of -2.3 V, corresponding to an overall energy efficiency of 57%. The superior CO2 electroreduction performance is attributed to the enhanced adsorption of key intermediate COOH* on electron-rich Ni single atom, together with the dense active sites.