Nanoscale Measurements of Catalysis with Scanning Electrochemical Probes

Nanoscale Measurements of Catalysis with Scanning Electrochemical Probes

Monday, February 26, 2024 2:50 PM to 3:10 PM · 20 min. (America/Vancouver)
Room 25A
Organized Session
Instrumentation & Nanoscience

Information

The performance of nanocrystal catalysts for the CO2 reduction reaction (CO2RR) is typically evaluated with nanocrystal ensembles, which returns an averaged system-level response of complex catalyst-modified electrodes with each nanocrystal likely contributing a different (unknown) amount. Measurements at single nanocrystals, taken in the context of statistical analysis of a population, and comparison to macroscale measurements are necessary to untangle the complexity of the ever-present heterogeneity in nanocrystal catalysts, achieve true structure–property correlation, and potentially identify nanocrystals with outlier performance. Here, we employ environment-controlled scanning electrochemical cell microscopy to isolate and investigate the electrocatalytic CO2RR response of individual facet-defined gold nanocrystals. Using correlative microscopy approaches, we conclusively demonstrate that {110}-terminated gold rhombohedra possess superior activity and selectivity for CO2RR compared with {111}-terminated octahedra and high-index {310}-terminated truncated ditetragonal prisms, especially at low overpotentials where electrode kinetics is anticipated to dominate the current response. The methodology framework described here could inform future studies of complex electrocatalytic processes through correlative single-entity and macroscale measurement techniques.
Day of Week
Monday
Session or Presentation
Presentation
Session Number
OC-13-02
Application
Nanoscience/Nanotechnology
Methodology
Electrochemistry
Primary Focus
Methodology

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