Copper has long been recognized as the most effective metal for converting carbon dioxide (CO 2) into valuable multi-carbon products like ethylene and ethanol—key feedstocks for chemicals and fuels.
Researchers are working to get a better look at how peroxides on the surface of copper oxide promote the oxidation of hydrogen but inhibit the oxidation of carbon monoxide, allowing them to steer ...
A unified copper-based catalyst platform featuring multivalent r-CuO nanorods for cathodic nitrate reduction (FE NH3% =96.8%) and pristine CuO nanorods for anodic glycerol oxidation (FE Formate% =93%) ...
Researchers to get a better look at how peroxides on the surface of copper oxide promote the oxidation of hydrogen but inhibit the oxidation of carbon monoxide, allowing them to steer oxidation ...
(Nanowerk News) Researchers at Binghamton University led research partnering with the Center for Functional Nanomaterials (CFN)—a U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Science User Facility at ...
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