CO 2 activation is an integral component of thermocatalytic and electrocatalytic CO 2 conversion to liquid fuels and valueadded chemicals. However, the thermodynamic stability of CO 2 and the high kinetic barriers to activating CO 2 are significant bottlenecks. In this work, we propose that dual atom alloys (DAAs), homo-and heterodimer islands in a Cu matrix, can offer stronger covalent CO 2 binding than pristine Cu. The active site is designed to mimic the Ni− Fe anaerobic carbon monoxide dehydrogenase CO 2 activation environment in a heterogeneous catalyst. We find that combinations of early transition metals (TMs) and late TMs embedded in Cu are thermodynamically stable and can offer stronger covalent CO 2 binding than Cu. Additionally, we identify DAAs that have CO binding energies similar to Cu, both to avoid surface poisoning and to ensure attainable CO diffusion to Cu sites so that the C−C bond formation ability of Cu can be retained in conjunction with facile CO 2 activation at the DAA sites. Machine learning feature selection reveals that the more electropositive dopants are primarily responsible for attaining the strong CO 2 binding. We propose seven Cu-based DAAs and two single atom alloys (SAAs) with early TM late TM combinations, (Sc, Ag), (Y, Ag), (Y, Fe), (Y, Ru), (Y, Cd), (Y, Au), (V, Ag), (Sc), and (Y), for facile CO 2 activation.
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