Redox regulation of Ni hydroxides with controllable phase composition towards biomass-derived polyol electro-refinery

Electrocatalytic refinery from biomass-derived glycerol (GLY) to formic acid (FA), one of the most promising candidates for green H2 carriers, has driven widespread attention for its sustainability. Herein, we fabricated a series of monolithic Ni hydroxide-based electrocatalysts by a facile and in situ electrochemical method through the manipulation of local pH near the electrode. The as-synthesized Ni(OH)2@NF-1.0 affords a low working potential of 1.36 VRHE to achieve 100% GLY conversion, 98.5% FA yield, 96.1% faradaic efficiency and ∼0.13 A cm−2 of current density. Its high efficiency on a wide range of polyol substrates further underscores the promise of sustainable electro-refinery. Through a combinatory analysis via H2 temperature-programmed reduction, cyclic voltammetry and in situ Raman spectroscopy, the precise regulation of synthetic potential was discovered to be highly essential to controlling the content, phase composition and redox properties of Ni hydroxides, which significantly determine the catalytic performance. Additionally, the ‘adsorption–activation’ mode of ortho-di-hydroxyl groups during the C–C bond cleavage of polyols was proposed based on a series of probe reactions. This work illuminates an advanced path for designing non-noble-metal-based catalysts to facilitate electrochemical biomass valorization.


This article is Open Access



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