4.6 Review

The role of electrode wettability in electrochemical reduction of carbon dioxide

Journal

JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY A
Volume 9, Issue 35, Pages 19369-19409

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d1ta03636j

Keywords

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Funding

  1. UQ Foundation Research Excellence Award
  2. Australian Research Council [LP160101729, FL170100101]
  3. University of Queensland (UQ) Graduate School
  4. NWO
  5. Australian Research Council [LP160101729, FL170100101] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

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The wettability of the electrode plays a crucial role in CO2RR by affecting the reactivity, selectivity, and stability of the electrode. Improving cathode performance by altering the wettability of the catalyst layer in gas-diffusion electrodes can lead to more efficient CO2RR. Current challenges and opportunities lie in developing efficient and selective cathodes for CO2RR at industrially relevant rates.
The electrochemical reduction of carbon dioxide (CO2RR) requires access to ample gaseous CO2 and liquid water to fuel reactions at high current densities for industrial-scale applications. Substantial improvement of the CO2RR rate has largely arisen from positioning the catalyst close to gas-liquid interfaces, such as in gas-diffusion electrodes. These requirements add complexity to an electrode design that no longer consists of only a catalyst but also a microporous and nanoporous network of gas-liquid-solid interfaces of the electrode. In this three-dimensional structure, electrode wettability plays a pivotal role in the CO2RR because the affinity of the electrode surface by water impacts the observed electrode reactivity, product selectivity, and long-term stability. All these performance metrics are critical in an industrial electrochemical process. This review provides an in-depth analysis of electrode wettability's role in achieving an efficient, selective, and stable CO2RR performance. We first discuss the underlying mechanisms of electrode wetting phenomena and the foreseen ideal wetting conditions for the CO2RR. Then we summarize recent advances in improving cathode performance by altering the wettability of the catalyst layer of gas-diffusion electrodes. We conclude the review by discussing the current challenges and opportunities to develop efficient and selective cathodes for CO2RR at industrially relevant rates. The insights generated from this review could also benefit the advancement of other critical electrochemical processes that involve multiple complex flows in porous electrodes, such as electrochemical reduction of carbon monoxide, oxygen, and nitrogen.

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