4.6 Article

Recent advances in the electrooxidation of biomass-based organic molecules for energy, chemicals and hydrogen production

Journal

CATALYSIS SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 10, Issue 10, Pages 3071-3112

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c9cy02446h

Keywords

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Funding

  1. CNRS Energy unit (Cellule Energie) through the project PEPS19-ELECTROFUEL
  2. French National Agency (ANR) through the LabEx CheMISyst [ANR-10-LABX-05-01]
  3. European Institute of Membranes of Montpellier through the Exploratory Project COGENFC (PAT-Axis-Energy-2018)
  4. European Union (ERDF)
  5. Region Nouvelle-Aquitaine

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Electrosynthesis, a historically powerful tool for the production of a number of industrial-scale inorganic or organic materials, has experienced a renaissance over the last ten years with research efforts seeking a dual production platform for molecules and energy carriers. It is termed a Power-to-X approach. Specifically, hydrogen (H-2) is a key compound in emerging energy conversion and storage systems, acting as an energy carrier to provide electrical energy with a significantly reduced environmental footprint through H-2/O-2 fuel cells. The clean energy production strategy from energy carriers is inversely termed an X-to-Power approach. However, H-2 sources remain up to now the main key challenge. Increasing interest surrounds the development of advanced low energy consumption electrolysis cells enabling reliable, sustainable and dual production of both H-2 and valuable chemicals from the selective oxidation of surplus biomass-derivatives. It can thus be summed up that the tremendous idea of generating electricity or producing fuels such as H-2 while synthesizing chemicals is an attractive pathway for organic synthesis and electricity production. However, precisely how this could be achieved in a cheap and sustainable way remains a puzzle for scientists. However, organics selective electrooxidation reactions are central topics and bridge fuel cell and electrolysis cell research. A number of (bio)catalytic interfaces have been developed to overcome their sluggish electrochemical kinetics. Within this perspective, we propose a detailed review on the recent advances over the last ten years in co-generative fuel cells and electrolysis cells that operate with biomass-based organic molecules (ethanol, ethylene glycol, glycerol, (oligo)saccharides, cellulose, hemicellulose) while highlighting experimental and theoretical research that unifies those fields to yield devices with improved performance. The identified main electrocatalytic reaction descriptors allow for new materials to be proposed, which could enable maximized activity, selectivity and durability of anode materials. This perspective particularly enlightens the missing fundamental knowledge on parameters dictating electrocatalysis of organic compounds in aqueous media. Overall, we discuss the implications for the wider scientific community of electrochemistry, electrocatalysis, materials science and organic chemistry, and finally provide several logical pathways and guidelines to stimulate progress, inspiring the development of organic-fuelled cogeneration electrochemical devices.

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