Chinese Journal of Catalysis ›› 2026, Vol. 87: 396-409.DOI: 10.1016/S1872-2067(26)65113-3

• Articles • Previous Articles    

Ligand-shell engineering of a Au25 nanocluster boosting CO2 electroreduction to syngas with tunable range proportion

Bowen Li, Changlin Lin, Qi Wang, Yongfeng Lun, Jun Fang, Shuqin Song*(), Yi Wang*()   

  1. The Key Laboratory of Low-Carbon Chemistry & Energy Conservation of Guangdong Province, PCFM Laboratory, School of Chemical Engineering and Technology, School of Materials Science and Engineering, Sun Yat-sen University, Guangzhou 510275, Guangdong, China
  • Received:2026-02-03 Accepted:2026-02-15 Online:2026-08-18 Published:2026-06-24
  • Supported by:
    National Natural Science Foundation of China(22478451);National Natural Science Foundation of China(22478450);National Natural Science Foundation of China(22408408);National State Key Laboratory of Catalysis(2024SKL-A-013);Energy Revolution S&T Program of Yulin Innovation Institute of Clean Energy(E511030817);Guangdong Basic and Applied Basic Research Foundation(2024A1515012565);Startup Fund for Recruited Talents of Sun Yat-sen University(76110-12256023)

Abstract:

Au nanoclusters (NCs) with atomic-level precision represent an ideal model catalyst enabling efficient CO2-to-chemical conversion, yet the catalytic performance of distinct active sites in Au NCs remains poorly understood. In this work, ligand-shell engineering has been successfully carried out through a "ligand-stripping pyrolysis" strategy to obtain modified Au25 NCs for electrocatalytic CO2 reduction reaction (eCO2RR). Significantly, in situ pyrolysis techniques and structural characterization identify that the exposure of S/Au active sites has been precisely controlled during the adjusted thermal decomposition of the Au NCs, which establishs a clear site-product relationship. The CO/H2 molar ratio can be precisely adjusted across an exceptionally wide range (0.26-25.47) - a span that encompasses key industrially relevant ratios, such as the 1:2 ratio optimal for Fischer-Tropsch synthesis. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations quantitatively disclose the interaction trend between exposed S/Au sites and CO2. S sites exhibit a superior CO2 affinity, with the local CO2 concentration increasing as S-site density increases, thereby kinetically promoting eCO2RR. Theoretical calculations also reveal that S sites facilitate the stabilization of *CO2 and *CO intermediates and promote electron transfer. In contrast, Au sites are energetically more favorable for the hydrogen evolution reaction. This study establishes an ideal platform for investigating structure-performance relationships of atomically precise NCs and provides guidance for designing metal NCs-based catalysts.

Key words: Au nanoclusters, Ligand engineering, Active sites, Electrochemical CO2 reduction reaction, Syngas