4.6 Review

Review and Analysis of CO2 Photoreduction Kinetics

Journal

ACS SUSTAINABLE CHEMISTRY & ENGINEERING
Volume 8, Issue 12, Pages 4677-4692

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acssuschemeng.9b06170

Keywords

CO2 photoreduction; Kinetics; Review; Analysis; Numerical Methods

Funding

  1. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council [EP/K021796/1]
  2. Research Centre for Carbon Solutions (RCCS)
  3. James Watt Scholarship Programme at Heriot-Watt University
  4. Buchan Chair in Sustainable Energy Engineering
  5. EPSRC [EP/K021796/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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Microkinetic, in situ analytics, and empirical modeling approaches for developing intrinsic CO2 photoreduction kinetics are presented in this Perspective. Intrinsic kinetic models that are independent of photoreactor geometry are critical for scaling CO2 photo-reduction photoreactors. Successfully scaling CO2 photoreduction is limited using the current extrinsic CO2 photoreduction kinetic models described in this Perspective, because they are dependent on the photoreactor geometry and scale used. The impact of different photoreactor geometries and light transport that lead to extrinsic kinetic models is reviewed. The impacts of temperature and pressure on surface diffusion is highlighted as additional important process parameters. The current Langmuir-Hinshelwood-based kinetic models are discussed, and their limitations are highlighted, with respect to modeling the possible deactivation of the photocatalyst. With a view on developing an intrinsic kinetic model, the challenges for developing CO2 photoreduction kinetics are highlighted and discussed with reference to the current extrinsic CO2 photoreduction kinetic model examples found in the literature. Robust analytical methods for collecting CO2 photoreduction kinetic data and for confirming the carbon source are discussed. The false positive production from adventitious carbon and organic impurities introduced during the synthesis and/or coating of photocatalysts with solvents and degradation of photoreactor components is highlighted as a challenge to collecting CO2 photoreduction kinetic data. It is shown that a wide range of the kinetic model coefficient values are possible when using a multistart, genetic algorithm, or particle swarm approach for estimating nonlinear model coefficients. Finally, an easy to test and implement approach using a mean median multistart and trust-region reflective algorithm method is presented for the estimation of nonlinear CO2 photoreduction kinetic model coefficients.

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