Operando probing of nanocracking in CuO-derived Cu during CO$_2$ electroreduction
Jiawei Wan, Ershuai Liu, Woong Choi, Jiayun Liang, Buyu Zhang,, Keon-Han Kim, Xianhu Sun, Meng Zhang, Han Xue, Yi Chen, Qiubo Zhang,, Changlian Wen, Ji Yang, Karen C. Bustillo, Peter Ercius, Denis Leshchev, Ji, Su, Zakaria Y. Al Balushi, Adam Z. Weber, Mark Asta, Alexis T. Bell

TL;DR
This study uses advanced operando techniques to reveal how nanocracks form in CuO-derived Cu catalysts during CO2 electroreduction, leading to enhanced active sites for multicarbon product formation.
Contribution
It introduces a multimodal operando approach to directly observe nanocracking mechanisms in CuO precatalysts during electroreduction.
Findings
Rapid CuO reduction creates a nanocrack network in Cu nanowires.
Nanocracks increase surface area and active site density.
Nanocracking can be tailored to optimize catalyst performance.
Abstract
Identifying and controlling active sites in electrocatalysis remains a grand challenge due to restructuring of catalysts in the complex chemical environments during operation. Inactive precatalysts can transform into active catalysts under reaction conditions, such as oxide-derived Cu (OD-Cu) for CO electroreduction displaying improved production of multicarbon (C) chemicals. Revealing the mechanism of active site origin in OD-Cu catalysts requires in situ/operando characterizations of structure, morphology, and valence state evolution with high spatial and temporal resolution. Applying newly developed electrochemical liquid cell transmission electron microscopy combined with X-ray absorption spectroscopy, our multimodal operando techniques unveil the formation pathways of OD-Cu active sites from CuO bicrystal nanowire precatalysts. Rapid reduction of CuO directly to Cu…
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