Electrochemical CO2 reduction reaction (CO2RR) to produce value-added multi-carbon chemicals has been an appealing approach to achieving environmentally friendly carbon neutrality in recent years. Despite extensive research focusing on the use of CO2 to produce high-value chemicals like high-energy-density hydrocarbons, there have been few reports on the production of propane (C3H8), which requires carbon chain elongation and protonation. A rationally designed 0D/2D hybrid Cu2O anchored-Ti3C2Tx MXene catalyst (Cu2O/MXene) is demonstrated with efficient CO2RR activity in an aqueous electrolyte to produce C3H8. As a result, a significantly high Faradaic efficiency (FE) of 3.3% is achieved for the synthesis of C3H8 via the CO2RR with Cu2O/MXene, which is ≈26 times higher than that of Cu/MXene prepared by the same hydrothermal process without NH4OH solution. Based on in-situ attenuated total reflection-Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (ATR-FTIR) and density functional theory (DFT) calculations, it is proposed that the significant electrocatalytic conversion originated from the synergistic behavior of the Cu2O nanoparticles, which bound the *C2 intermediates, and the MXene that bound the *CO coupling to the C3 intermediate. The results disclose that the rationally designed MXene-based hybrid catalyst facilitates multi-carbon coupling as well as protonation, thereby manipulating the CO2RR pathway.
Keywords: C2‐C1 coupling; electrochemical CO2 reduction; in‐situ ATR‐FTIR; propane production; proton‐coupled electron transfer.
© 2024 The Author(s). Advanced Science published by Wiley‐VCH GmbH.