4.6 Article

Electrodes Designed for Converting Bicarbonate into CO

Journal

ACS ENERGY LETTERS
Volume 5, Issue 7, Pages 2165-2173

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsenergylett.0c00898

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Natural Resources Canada [EIP2MAT-001]
  2. Canadian Natural Science and Engineering Research Council [RGPIN 337345-13]
  3. Canadian Foundation for Innovation [229288]
  4. Canadian Institute for Advanced Research [BSE-BERL-162173]
  5. Total S.A.
  6. Canada Research Chairs
  7. Canada First Research Excellence Fund, Quantum Materials and Future Technologies Program

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The deployment of electrolyzers that convert CO2 into chemicals and fuels requires appropriate integration with upstream carbon capture processes. To this end, the electrolytic conversion of aqueous (bi)carbonate offers the opportunity to avoid the energy-intensive steps currently used to extract pressurized CO, from carbon capture solutions. We demonstrate here that an optimized silver gas diffusion electrode (GDE) architecture enables conversion of model carbon capture solutions (i.e., 3 M KHCO3) into CO at partial current densities (J(CO)) greater than 100 mA cm(-2) with CO2 utilization rates of similar to 70%. These results exceed the performance of any previously reported liquid-fed CO(2)( )electrolyzers and rival gas-fed devices. We were able to hit these metrics through the systematic design of gas diffusion layer (GDL) components (e.g., polytetrafluoroethylene) and catalyst layer constituents (i.e., Nafion, silver) on CO production. A key finding of this work is that hydrophobic GDE components (which are common to gas-fed CO2RR electrolyzers) decrease in situ CO2 generation and thus the formation of the final CO product. These findings show a clear path toward industrially relevant reactors that couple electrolytic CO2 conversion with carbon capture.

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