Correlations between experiments and simulations for formic acid oxidation [post]

Alexander Bagger, Kim D. Jensen, Maryam Rashedi, Rui Luo, Jia Du, Damin Zhang, Inês J. Pereira, María Escudero-Escribano, Matthias Arenz, Jan Rossmeisl
2022 unpublished
Electrocatalytic conversion of formic acid oxidation to CO2 and the related CO2 reduction to formic acid represent a potential closed carbon-loop based on renewable energy. However, formic acid fuel cells are inhibited by the formation of site-blocking species during the formic acid oxidation reaction. Recent studies have elucidated how the binding of carbon and hydrogen on catalyst surfaces promote CO2 reduction towards CO and formic acid. This has also given fundamental insights to the
more » ... reaction, i.e. the oxidation of formic acid. In this work, simulations on multiple materials have been combined with formic acid oxidation experiments on electrocatalysts to shed light on the reaction and the accompanying catalytic limitations. We correlate data on different catalysts to show that (i) formate, which is the proposed formic acid oxidation intermediate, has similar binding energetics on Pt, Pd and Ag, while Ag does not work as catalyst, and (ii) *H adsorbed on the surface results in *CO formation and poisoning through a chemical disproportionation step. Using these results, the fundamental limitations can be revealed and progress our understanding of the mechanism of the formic acid oxidation reaction .
doi:10.26434/chemrxiv-2022-t4lqn-v3 fatcat:y7qhmupotfanjeyi2j2bkxouwu