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|a Wuttig, Anna
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|a Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Chemistry
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|a Wuttig, Anna
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|a Surendranath, Yogesh
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|a Yaguchi, Momo
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|a Motobayashi, Kenta
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|a Osawa, Masatoshi
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|a Surendranath, Yogesh
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|a Inhibited proton transfer enhances Au-catalyzed CO[subscript 2]-to-fuels selectivity
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|a Inhibited proton transfer enhances Au-catalyzed CO2-to-fuels selectivity
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|b National Academy of Sciences (U.S.),
|c 2017-02-23T21:14:15Z.
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|z Get fulltext
|u http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/107143
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|a CO[subscript 2] reduction in aqueous electrolytes suffers efficiency losses because of the simultaneous reduction of water to H[subscript 2]. We combine in situ surface-enhanced IR absorption spectroscopy (SEIRAS) and electrochemical kinetic studies to probe the mechanistic basis for kinetic bifurcation between H[subscript 2] and CO production on polycrystalline Au electrodes. Under the conditions of CO[subscript 2] reduction catalysis, electrogenerated CO species are irreversibly bound to Au in a bridging mode at a surface coverage of ∼0.2 and act as kinetically inert spectators. Electrokinetic data are consistent with a mechanism of CO production involving rate-limiting, single-electron transfer to CO[subscript 2] with concomitant adsorption to surface active sites followed by rapid one-electron, two-proton transfer and CO liberation from the surface. In contrast, the data suggest an H[subscript 2] evolution mechanism involving rate-limiting, single-electron transfer coupled with proton transfer from bicarbonate, hydronium, and/or carbonic acid to form adsorbed H species followed by rapid one-electron, one-proton, or H recombination reactions. The disparate proton coupling requirements for CO and H[subscript 2] production establish a mechanistic basis for reaction selectivity in electrocatalytic fuel formation, and the high population of spectator CO species highlights the complex heterogeneity of electrode surfaces under conditions of fuel-forming electrocatalysis.
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|a MIT International Science and Technology Initiatives
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|a MISTI (Hayashi Seed Fund)
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|a United States. Air Force Office of Scientific Research (Award FA9550-15-1-0135)
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|a Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Chemistry
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|a National Science Foundation (U.S.). Graduate Research Fellowship Program
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|a Article
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|t Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
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