Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
220503 | Journal of Electroanalytical Chemistry | 2009 | 6 Pages |
Carbon dioxide electroreduction on copper electrode was studied by surface enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) in K2SO4 aqueous solutions with different pH values. CO2 was bubbled into the solution at 0 V vs. Ag/AgCl, i.e., on an oxidized copper surface. In acidic solutions (pH around 2.5), at −0.2 V, bands indicative of the presence of ethylene on the electrode surface were detected. Although ethylene is knowledgably a product of CO2 electroreduction on copper, it was not experimentally identified on the electrode’s surface at such a low cathodic potential in prior works. In solutions with pH around 2.5, CO bands were not observed, suggesting that hydrocarbons could be formed by a pathway that does not occur via adsorbed CO. In solutions with higher pHs, a complex spectral pattern, between 800 and 1700 cm−1, was observed at approximately −0.4 V. The observed spectrum closely resembles those reported in the literature for adsorption of monocarboxylic acids with small chains. The spectral features indicate the presence of a structure containing a double CC bond, a carboxyl group, and C–H bonds on the electrode’s surface. SERS spectra obtained in CO-saturated solution are also presented. However, in this case, no SERS bands were observed in the region between 800 and 1700 cm−1 at low cathodic potentials.