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Accelerating the commercialization of CO electroreduction is essential for carbon utilization, yet it faces challenges of precious metal catalysts cost and scaling-up of the corresponding devices. In this study, a low-cost and tri-coordinated single-atom catalyst (SAC) with Ni-N3 center is fabricated in gram-scale using metal ionic liquids as precursor. The gram-scale Ni-N3 SAC (g-NiN3) achieves efficient electroreduction of CO to CO (eCO-to-CO) with a maximum Faradaic efficiency of 98.9% at 2.8 V in a 2 × 2 cm membrane electrode assembly (MEA) cell, and CO selectivity exceeds 90% during 100 h electrolysis at 100 mA·cm. Moreover, the g-NiN3 is tested in a scale-up MEA reactor (10 × 10 cm), which can not only show 97.1% CO Faradaic efficiency with a reaction current of 6.07 A but also achieves a CO single-pass conversion of 41.0%, corresponding to energy efficiency of the system as high as 43.1%. The overall performance of g-NiN3 is one of the state-of-the-art systems for eCO-to-CO. In addition, the scale-up device stably generates CO at a high rate of 12.0 L·kW·h over continuous CO electrolysis. The techno-economic assessment demonstrates that the eCO-to-CO using g-NiN3 can realize CO production cost of 1.08 $·kg, and shows great profitability prospects in the future.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/advs.202500368 | DOI Listing |
Nat Commun
July 2025
Key Laboratory of Advanced Carbon-Based Functional Materials (Fujian Province University), Fuzhou University, Fuzhou, 350016, Fujian, China.
Single-atom catalysts (SACs) enable atomic-level control over active sites, but orbital-level manipulation to steer catalytic behavior remains challenging. Here, we address this issue through d-orbital engineering of Cu SACs, achieving simultaneous control over coordination geometry (Cu-N) and high metal loading (33.2 wt%) for direct benzene-to-phenol oxidation with HO.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdv Sci (Weinh)
May 2025
Beijing Key Laboratory of Ionic Liquids Clean Process, State Key Laboratory of Multiphase Complex Systems, Key Laboratory of Green Process and Engineering, Institute of Process Engineering, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, 100190, China.
Accelerating the commercialization of CO electroreduction is essential for carbon utilization, yet it faces challenges of precious metal catalysts cost and scaling-up of the corresponding devices. In this study, a low-cost and tri-coordinated single-atom catalyst (SAC) with Ni-N3 center is fabricated in gram-scale using metal ionic liquids as precursor. The gram-scale Ni-N3 SAC (g-NiN3) achieves efficient electroreduction of CO to CO (eCO-to-CO) with a maximum Faradaic efficiency of 98.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF