Enhanced methanol production from photothermal CO₂ reduction via multilevel interface design

Photothermal CO₂ hydrogenation is a promising route to produce methanol as a sustainable liquid solar fuel. However, most existing catalysts require a combination of solar irradiation and additional heat input to achieve a satisfactory reaction rate. For the few that can be driven solely by light, their reaction rates are one order of magnitude lower. We develop a photothermal catalyst with multilevel interfaces that achieves improved methanol production from photothermal CO₂ hydrogenation without external heat. The catalyst features a layered structure comprising Cu/ZnO/Al₂O₃ (CZA) covered by oxidized carbon black (oCB), where the oCB/CZA interface promotes efficient heat generation and transfer, and the Cu/oxide interface contributes to high catalytic activity. Under a mild pressure of 8 bar, our oCB/CZA catalyst shows a methanol selectivity of 64.7% with a superior production rate of 4.91 mmol gcza⁻¹ h⁻¹, at least one order of magnitude higher than other photothermal catalysts solely driven by light. This work demonstrates a photothermal catalyst design strategy for liquid solar fuel production.

Wang, H.; Shang, B.; Choi, C.; Jeon, S.; Gao, Y.; Wang, T.; Harmon, N. J.; Liu, M.; Stach, E. A.; Wang, H. Enhanced methanol production from photothermal CO2 reduction via multilevel interface design, Nano. Res., 2024, Just accepted manuscript. https://doi.org/10.26599/NR.2025.94907160

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Statistical analysis of HAADF-STEM images to determine the surface coverage and distribution of immobilized molecular complexes

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Room-Temperature Formate Ester Transfer Hydrogenation Enables an Electrochemical/Thermal Organometallic Cascade for Methanol Synthesis from CO₂