Abstract
The microenvironment around catalytic sites plays crucial roles in enzymatic catalysis while its precise control in heterogeneous catalysts remains challenging. Herein, the coordinatively unsaturated metal nodes of Hf-based metal-organic framework nanosheets are simultaneously codecorated with catalytically active Co(salen) units and adjacent pyridyl-substituted alkyl carboxylic acids via a post modification route. By varying pyridyl-substituted alkyl carboxylic acids, the spatial positioning of the N atom in pyridine group relative to adjacent Co(salen) can be precisely controlled. Notably, the 3-(pyridin-4-yl)propionic acid, with para-position pyridine N atom, maximally improves the electrocatalytic CO(2) reduction performance of Co(salen) unit, far superior to other counterparts. Mechanism investigations reveal that the pyridine unit of 3-(pyridin-4-yl)propionic acid is optimally positioned relative to Co(salen) and undergoes in situ reduction to pyridinyl radical under working potentials. This greatly facilitates the stabilization of *COOH intermediate via hydrogen-bonding interaction, lowering the formation energy barrier of *COOH and therefore boosting CO(2) electroreduction.