Grand Canonical DFT Investigation of the CO2RR and HER Reaction Mechanisms on MoTe2 Edges

Abstract
MoTe2 has been experimentally and theoretically identified as a promising cathode candidate for electrocatalytic CO2 reduction (CO2RR). A full understanding of its reactivity requires special consideration of the reaction kinetics, but this is challenging due to the varying electrode potential in the canonical density functional theory (DFT), which calls for grand canonical, constant potential methods. Here, the full reaction pathways for the CO2RR to CO and the competing hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) are investigated on a MoTe2 edge in an alkaline medium using a grand canonical ensemble DFT approach with a hybrid solvent model to understand the explicit effect of the applied potential. Our results show that the barrier of the first CO2RR step, the CO2 adsorption, is lower than the first HER step, the Volmer step, which implies that the CO2RR is favored. We also find that at more negative potentials, the first CO2RR steps become more favorable, whereas CO desorption becomes less favorable, indicating that further CO reduction is expected instead of CO desorption. However, the potential of the Volmer step depends more strongly on the potential than CO2 adsorption, making HER more favorable at more negative potentials. Overall, our study identified edge-rich MoTe2 nanoribbons as possible catalysts for alkaline CO2RR.
Main Authors
Format
Articles Research article
Published
2023
Series
Subjects
Publication in research information system
Publisher
American Chemical Society (ACS)
The permanent address of the publication
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:jyu-202311137919Use this for linking
Review status
Peer reviewed
ISSN
1932-7447
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcc.3c04474
Language
English
Published in
Journal of Physical Chemistry C
Citation
  • Pedersen, P. D., Melander, M. M., Bligaard, T., Vegge, T., Honkala, K., & Hansen, H. A. (2023). Grand Canonical DFT Investigation of the CO2RR and HER Reaction Mechanisms on MoTe2 Edges. Journal of Physical Chemistry C, 127(38), 18855-18864. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcc.3c04474
License
In CopyrightOpen Access
Additional information about funding
This project was funded by the Villum Foundation through the V-sustain project (No. 9455).
Copyright© 2023 American Chemical Society

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