Mohammad Asadi,Bijandra Kumar,Amirhossein Behranginia,Brian A. Rosen,Artem Baskin,Nikita Repnin,Davide Pisasale,Patrick Phillips,Wei Zhu,Richard T. Haasch,Robert F. Klie,Petr Král,Jeremiah T. Abiade,Amin Salehi‐Khojin
Electrochemical reduction of carbon dioxide has been recognized as an efficient way to convert carbon dioxide to energy-rich products. Noble metals (for example, gold and silver) have been demonstrated to reduce carbon dioxide at moderate rates and low overpotentials. Nevertheless, the development of inexpensive systems with an efficient carbon dioxide reduction capability remains a challenge. Here we identify molybdenum disulphide as a promising cost-effective substitute for noble metal catalysts. We uncover that molybdenum disulphide shows superior carbon dioxide reduction performance compared with the noble metals with a high current density and low overpotential (54 mV) in an ionic liquid. Scanning transmission electron microscopy analysis and first principle modelling reveal that the molybdenum-terminated edges of molybdenum disulphide are mainly responsible for its catalytic performance due to their metallic character and a high d-electron density. This is further experimentally supported by the carbon dioxide reduction performance of vertically aligned molybdenum disulphide. Electrochemical reduction is one process to produce higher value chemicals from carbon dioxide, and it is typically catalysed by noble metals. Here, the authors demonstrate that molybdenum disulphide is also capable of efficiently catalysing the reaction in the presence of an ionic liquid.