MRS Meetings and Events

 

EN05.01.05 2024 MRS Spring Meeting

Controlling Methanol Selectivity on Immobilized Cobalt Phthalocyanine on Carbon Nanotubes for Photoelectrochemical and Electrochemical CO2 Reduction

When and Where

Apr 22, 2024
9:45am - 10:00am

Room 335, Level 3, Summit

Presenter

Co-Author(s)

Calton Kong1,2,Thomas Chan2,3,Grace Rome4,Darci Collins4,Alex King2,1,RajivRamanujam Prabhakar2,Sarah Collins4,Michelle Young2,Mickey Wilson4,Finn Babbe2,Tobias Kistler2,Myles Steiner4,Adele Tamboli4,Emily Warren4,Cliff Kubiak3,Joel Ager2,Annie Greenaway4

University of California, Berkeley1,Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory2,University of California, San Diego3,National Renewable Energy Laboratory4

Abstract

Calton Kong1,2,Thomas Chan2,3,Grace Rome4,Darci Collins4,Alex King2,1,RajivRamanujam Prabhakar2,Sarah Collins4,Michelle Young2,Mickey Wilson4,Finn Babbe2,Tobias Kistler2,Myles Steiner4,Adele Tamboli4,Emily Warren4,Cliff Kubiak3,Joel Ager2,Annie Greenaway4

University of California, Berkeley1,Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory2,University of California, San Diego3,National Renewable Energy Laboratory4
Electrochemical CO<sub>2</sub> reduction (CO<sub>2</sub>R) using heterogenized molecular catalysts usually yields 2-electron reduction products (CO, formate); recently, it has been reported that certain preparations of immobilized cobalt phthalocyanine (CoPc) produce methanol (MeOH), a 6-electron reduction product. Here, we demonstrate the significance of the role mass transport plays in CoPc selectivity to different CO<sub>2</sub>R products. Specifically, a moderate linear flow velocity of 8.5 cm/min has the highest MeOH selectivity at 35%, with higher flow rates increasing CO selectivity and lower flow rates increasing HER, suggesting that CO is a free intermediate. We use a simple, physically mixed, polymer free preparation of CoPc on multiwalled carbon nanotubes (MWCNT) to achieve moderate MeOH selectivity in near-neutral aqueous conditions at -1.2 V vs RHE. An onset potential of -0.8 V vs. RHE for MeOH was observed with increasing Faradaic efficiency until it reaches a relative maximum at -1.2V vs. RHE and lowering as the reductive potential increases. The catalyst was made compatible with Au planar substrates using a poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene) polystyrene sulfonate (PEDOT:PSS) adhesion layer. Using the PEDOT:PSS adhesion layer, we integrated the CoPc catalyst onto a multijunction GaInP/GaAs three terminal tandem (3TT) solar cell, that could operate two separate electrodes at different potentials. We achieved 4% FE toward MeOH on the 3TT solar cell at +0.2 V vs RHE, demonstrating that the 3TT can be used as a platform for future study of tandem photoelectrochemical systems.

Keywords

spray deposition

Symposium Organizers

Demetra Achilleos, University College Dublin
Virgil Andrei, University of Cambridge
Robert Hoye, University of Oxford
Katarzyna Sokol, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Symposium Support

Bronze
Angstrom Engineering Inc.
National Renewable Energy Laboratory

Publishing Alliance

MRS publishes with Springer Nature