Regulation of active sites of electrocatalysts is critical in adjusting electronic structure and catalytic selectivity towards oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) to hydrogen peroxide (H2O2). Herein, the Cu2X/CNTs (X = Se, SSe, S) hollow tetrakaidecahedron catalysts were synthesized to facilitate the electrocatalytic reduction of O2 to H2O2. The introduction of S resulted in a shift from four-electron pathway on Cu2Se/CNTs to two-electron process on Cu2S/CNTs, ultimately leading to an enhancement in H2O2 productivity. Importantly, the addition of extra S species can modulate the chemical environment of active sites, and electrochemical tests demonstrate that the Cu2S/CNTs catalyst exhibits an enhanced selectivity (over 91 %), production rate (360 mmol gcat-1 h-1), and durability for H2O2 undergoing a two-electron process by an H-type electrolytic cell. The in-situ Raman spectroscopy result confirms that the structural stability of Cu2S/CNTs during the reaction, and the accumulation of H2O2 increased with the extension of reaction time. Various experimental results and density functional theory (DFT) reveal that the S atoms can optimize the adsorption strength of the active sites to reaction intermediates, thereby creating an appropriate energy barrier for the formation of the determinant intermediate OOH* in H2O2 production, while maintain a high energy barrier for OO bond breaking of OOH* towards H2O formation. This study proves insights into strategies for controlling H2O2 production and guiding the optimization of catalysts for H2O2 electrosynthesis.
Keywords: Cu(2)X/CNTs; Electronic structure; H(2)O(2) selectivity; Hollow tetrakaidecahedron; Reaction pathway.
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