Coupling
acid–electrolyte proton exchange membrane fuel
cells for electricity generation and cathodic hydrogenation for valuable
chemical production shows great potential in energy and chemical industry.
The key for this promising approach is the identification of cathode
electrocatalysts with acid resistance, high activity, and low fabrication
cost for practical applications. Among various promising cathodic
candidates for this integrative approach, the easily available and
cheap Cu suffers from low acidic hydrogenation activity due to kinetically
arduous proton adsorption/activation. Inspired by the kinetic advantages
of the concerted proton-coupled electron transfer (CPET) over the
sequential proton–electron transfer process, herein, we use
phytate coordination on Cu surface to overcome the kinetic bottleneck
for proton adsorption/activation through the CPET pathway in an acidic
half-cell setup; this leads to 1 order of magnitude activity enhancement
(36.94-fold) for nitrobenzene hydrogenation. Mechanistic analysis
confirms that phytate, as proton acceptor, induces the CPET process
and overcomes the above kinetic limitations by tuning the d-band center
and concentrating protons on the Cu surface. Consequently, the CPET
process facilitates the formation of active hydrogen intermediates
for efficient cathodic hydrogenation. This work provides a promising
approach to integrate electricity generation and chemical production.