4.8 Article

Comparative life cycle assessment of electrochemical upgrading of CO2 to fuels and feedstocks

Journal

GREEN CHEMISTRY
Volume 23, Issue 2, Pages 867-880

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d0gc02831b

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Canada First Research Excellence Fund (CFREF) at University of Calgary

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Development of electrochemical pathways for converting CO2 into valuable products has been rapidly progressing in the past decade. A comparative life cycle assessment was conducted to evaluate one-step and two-step electrochemical conversion of CO2, revealing that the two-step electrosynthesis pathways are more compelling in terms of climate benefits. The carbon intensity of electrosynthesis products is primarily influenced by the significant energy requirements for conversion and product separation phases.
Development of electrochemical pathways to convert CO2 into fuels and feedstock is rapidly progressing over the past decade. Here we present a comparative cradle-to-gate life cycle assessment (LCA) of one and two-step electrochemical conversion of CO2 to eight major value-added products; wherein we consider CO2 capture, conversion and product separation in our process model. We measure the carbon intensity (i.e., global warming impact) of one and two-step electrochemical routes with its counterparts thermochemical CO2 utilization and fossil-fuel based incumbent synthesis routes for those eight products. Here we show that due to inevitable carbonate formation or CO2 crossover in one-step CO2 electrolysis using neutral pH membrane electrode assembly, the two-step electrosynthesis pathways (i.e., CO2 to CO in solid oxide electrolysis cell followed by CO electroreduction in alkaline flow cell) would be distinctively compelling through the lens of climate benefits. This analysis further reveals that the carbon intensity of electrosynthesis products is due to significant energy requirement for conversion (77-83% of total energy consumption for gas products) and product separation (30 85% of total energy consumption for liquid products) phases. Global warming impact of electrochemical route is highly sensitive to the electricity emission intensity and is compelling over incumbent routes only when coupled with low emission intensity (<0.25 kg CO(2)e per kWh). As the technology advances, we identify near-term compelling products that would provide climate benefits over incumbent routes, including syngas, ethylene and n-propanol. We further identify technological goals required for electrochemical route to be competitive, notably achieving liquid product concentration >20 wt%. It is our hope that this analysis will guide the CO2 electrosynthesis community to target achieving these technological goals, such that when coupled with low-carbon electricity, electrochemical route would bring climate benefits in near future.

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