4.8 Article

Electrolytic Conversion of Bicarbonate into CO in a Flow Cell

Journal

JOULE
Volume 3, Issue 6, Pages 1487-1497

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.joule.2019.05.021

Keywords

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Funding

  1. University of British Columbia 4YF Program
  2. Canada Foundation for Innovation
  3. Canada Research Chairs
  4. Quantum Materials and Future Technologies Program
  5. National Science and Engineering Research Council (NSERC)
  6. Canada Institute for Advanced Research (CIFAR)

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Electrolyzers designed to convert CO2 into carbon products typically rely on a gaseous CO2 feedstock or CO2-saturated electrolyte. We show herein that aqueous HCO3- solutions can also be electrochemically converted into CO gas at meaningful rates in a flow cell containing a bipolar membrane (BPM). Electrolysis upon a N-2-saturated 3.0 M KHCO3 solution yields CO with a faradic efficiency of 81% at 25 mA cm(-2) and 37% at 100 mA cm(-2), outputs that are comparable to the analogous experiment where the bicarbonate solution is saturated with gaseous CO2. This electrolytic process is made possible by the membrane delivering protons for reaction with the bicarbonate feed to form electrocatalytically active CO2. This reaction pathway offers the potential to use electrolysis to bypass the thermally intensive step of extracting CO2 from HCO3- solutions generated in carbon-capture schemes.

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