4.8 Article

Coordination Polymer Electrocatalysts Enable Efficient CO-to-Acetate Conversion

Journal

ADVANCED MATERIALS
Volume 35, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adma.202209567

Keywords

acetate; coordination polymers; CO; CO2 reduction; electrosynthesis; MEA

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Upgrading carbon dioxide/monoxide to multi-carbon C2+ products using renewable electricity offers a sustainable approach to fuel and chemical production. A new coordination polymer catalyst consisting of Cu(I) and benzimidazole units linked via Cu(I)-imidazole coordination bonds enables selective reduction of CO to acetate with a 61% Faradaic efficiency. The catalyst integrated in a cation exchange membrane-based membrane electrode assembly allows stable acetate electrosynthesis and achieves concentrated acetate collection, high CO-to-acetate conversion efficiency, and good acetate full-cell energy efficiency.
Upgrading carbon dioxide/monoxide to multi-carbon C2+ products using renewable electricity offers one route to more sustainable fuel and chemical production. One of the most appealing products is acetate, the profitable electrosynthesis of which demands a catalyst with higher efficiency. Here, a coordination polymer (CP) catalyst is reported that consists of Cu(I) and benzimidazole units linked via Cu(I)-imidazole coordination bonds, which enables selective reduction of CO to acetate with a 61% Faradaic efficiency at -0.59 volts versus the reversible hydrogen electrode at a current density of 400 mA cm(-2) in flow cells. The catalyst is integrated in a cation exchange membrane-based membrane electrode assembly that enables stable acetate electrosynthesis for 190 h, while achieving direct collection of concentrated acetate (3.3 molar) from the cathodic liquid stream, an average single-pass utilization of 50% toward CO-to-acetate conversion, and an average acetate full-cell energy efficiency of 15% at a current density of 250 mA cm(-2).

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