Enabling technologies for the continuous electrically driven conversion of CO 2 and water to multi-carbon products at high current densities

Herein, we demonstrate greatly improved conversion of CO 2 using a gas diffusion electrode (GDE) with flowing electrolyte configuration for CO 2 gas delivery in combination with a high surface area nickel phosphide electrocatalyst. This configuration achieves 40–50% selectivity for total carbon prod...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of materials chemistry. A, Materials for energy and sustainability Materials for energy and sustainability, 2023-01, Vol.11 (2), p.717-725
Hauptverfasser: Dhiman, Mahak, Chen, Yingying, Li, Yifei, Laursen, Anders B., Calvinho, Karin U. D., Deutsch, Todd G., Dismukes, G. Charles
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Herein, we demonstrate greatly improved conversion of CO 2 using a gas diffusion electrode (GDE) with flowing electrolyte configuration for CO 2 gas delivery in combination with a high surface area nickel phosphide electrocatalyst. This configuration achieves 40–50% selectivity for total carbon products over H 2 formation (HER) at total current densities ranging from 50 to 300 mA cm −2 . We developed a soft-templating method using CTAB detergent micelles for synthesis of phase-pure Ni 2 P, achieving a 260-fold larger surface area (BET) and porous sponge-like morphology that produces stable currents. This catalyst produces mainly one C-product, methylglyoxal (MG, C 3 H 4 O 2 ) with 38–47% overall selectivity, the highest reported selectivity for a 12-electron reduction product. The versatile soft-templating method for electrocatalyst synthesis uses low-temperature (185 °C) that is permissive for incorporation of co-catalysts that are otherwise destroyed by the high temperatures used in traditional solid-state synthesis (SSS). The non-porous Ni 2 P-SSS catalyst produces mainly H 2 at these current densities. Achieving these high currents and C/H selectivity benefits from use of hydrophobic polymers as co-catalyst binders (cationic = Nafion, anionic = PFAEM and neutral = PTFE) to improve CO 2 conversion. PFAEM is the better ionomer for the CO 2 RR at high current density, postulated as due to suppressing CO 2 conversion to inactive bicarbonate. Precipitation of the carbon products as a polycarbonate polymer occurs at high currents.
ISSN:2050-7488
2050-7496
DOI:10.1039/D2TA08173C