6 research outputs found

    Role of the Carbon-Based Gas Diffusion Layer on Flooding in a Gas Diffusion Electrode Cell for Electrochemical CO<sub>2</sub> Reduction

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    The deployment of gas diffusion electrodes (GDEs) for the electrochemical CO2 reduction reaction (CO2RR) has enabled current densities an order of magnitude greater than those of aqueous H cells. The gains in production, however, have come with stability challenges due to rapid flooding of GDEs, which frustrate both laboratory experiments and scale-up prospects. Here, we investigate the role of carbon gas diffusion layers (GDLs) in the advent of flooding during CO2RR, finding that applied potential plays a central role in the observed instabilities. Electrochemical characterization of carbon GDLs with and without catalysts suggests that the high overpotential required during electrochemical CO2RR initiates hydrogen evolution on the carbon GDL support. These potentials impact the wetting characteristics of the hydrophobic GDL, resulting in flooding that is independent of CO2RR. Findings from this work can be extended to any electrochemical reduction reaction using carbon-based GDEs (CORR or N2RR) with cathodic overpotentials of less than -0.65 V versus a reversible hydrogen electrode.ChemE/Materials for Energy Conversion & Storag

    Operando Infrared Spectroscopy Reveals the Dynamic Nature of Semiconductor-Electrolyte Interface in Multinary Metal Oxide Photoelectrodes

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    Detailed knowledge about the semiconductor/electrolyte interface in photoelectrochemical (PEC) systems has been lacking because of the inherent difficulty of studying such interfaces, especially during operation. Current understandings of these interfaces are mostly from the extrapolation of ex situ data or from modeling approaches. Hence, there is a need for operando techniques to study such interfaces to develop a better understanding of PEC systems. Here, we use operando photoelectrochemical attenuated total reflection Fourier transform infrared (PEC-ATR-FTIR) spectroscopy to study the metal oxide/electrolyte interface, choosing BiVO4 as a model photoanode. We demonstrate that preferential dissolution of vanadium occurs from the BiVO4/water interface, upon illumination in open-circuit conditions, while both bismuth and vanadium dissolution occurs when an anodic potential is applied under illumination. This dynamic dissolution alters the surface Bi:V ratio over time, which subsequently alters the band bending in the space charge region. This further impacts the overall PEC performance of the photoelectrode, at a time scale very relevant for most lab-scale studies, and therefore has serious implications on the performance analysis and fundamental studies performed on this and other similar photoelectrodes. ChemE/Materials for Energy Conversion & Storag

    Liquid-Solid Boundaries Dominate Activity of CO<sub>2</sub>Reduction on Gas-Diffusion Electrodes

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    Electrochemical CO2 electrolysis to produce hydrocarbon fuels or material feedstocks offers a renewable alternative to fossilized carbon sources. Gas-diffusion electrodes (GDEs), composed of solid electrocatalysts on porous supports positioned near the interface of a conducting electrolyte and CO2 gas, have been able to demonstrate the substantial current densities needed for future commercialization. These higher reaction rates have often been ascribed to the presence of a three-phase interface, where solid, liquid, and gas provide electrons, water, and CO2, respectively. Conversely, mechanistic work on electrochemical reactions implicates a fully two-phase reaction interface, where gas molecules reach the electrocatalyst's surface by dissolution and diffusion through the electrolyte. Because the discrepancy between an atomistic three-phase versus two-phase reaction has substantial implications for the design of catalysts, gas-diffusion layers, and cell architectures, the nuances of nomenclatures and governing phenomena surrounding the three-phase-region require clarification. Here we outline the macro, micro, and atomistic phenomena occurring within a gas-diffusion electrode to provide a focused discussion on the architecture of the often-discussed three-phase region for CO2 electrolysis. From this information, we comment on the outlook for the broader CO2 electroreduction GDE cell architecture. Accepted Author ManuscriptChemE/Materials for Energy Conversion & Storag

    Modeling the Local Environment within Porous Electrode during Electrochemical Reduction of Bicarbonate

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    The electrochemical reduction of bicarbonate to renewable chemicals without external gaseous CO2 supply has been motivated as a means of integrating conversion with upstream CO2 capture. The way that CO2 is formed and transported during CO2-mediated bicarbonate reduction in flow cells is profoundly different from conventional CO2 saturated and gas-fed systems and a thorough understanding of the process would allow further advancements. Here, we report a comprehensive two-phase mass transport model to estimate the local concentration of species in the porous electrode resultant from homogeneous and electrochemical reactions of (bi)carbonate and CO2. The model indicates that significant CO2 is generated in the porous electrode during electrochemical reduction, even though the starting bicarbonate solution contains negligible CO2. However, the in situ formation of CO2 and subsequent reduction to CO exhibits a plateau at high potentials due to neutralization of the protons by the alkaline reaction products, acting as the limiting step toward higher CO current densities. Nevertheless, the pH in the catalyst layer exhibits a relatively smaller rise, compared to conventional electrochemical CO2 reduction cells, because of the reaction between protons and CO32- and OH- that is confined to a relatively small volume. A large fraction of the CL exhibits a mildly alkaline environment at high current densities, while an appreciable amount of carbonic acid (0.1-1 mM) and a lower pH exist adjacent to the membrane, which locally favor hydrogen evolution, especially at low electrolyte concentrations. The results presented here provide insights into local cathodic conditions for both bicarbonate cells and direct-CO2 reduction membrane electrode assembly cells utilizing cation exchange membranes facing the cathode.ChemE/Materials for Energy Conversion & Storag

    Along the Channel Gradients Impact on the Spatioactivity of Gas Diffusion Electrodes at High Conversions during CO<sub>2</sub>Electroreduction

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    Results of a 2-D transport model for a gas diffusion electrode performing CO2 reduction to CO with a flowing catholyte are presented, including the concentration gradients along the flow cell, spatial distribution of the current density and local pH in the catalyst layer. The model predicts that both the concentration of CO2 and the buffer electrolyte gradually diminish along the channels for a parallel flow of gas and electrolyte as a result of electrochemical conversion and nonelectrochemical consumption. At high single-pass conversions, significant concentration gradients exist along the flow channels leading to large local variations in the current density (&gt;150 mA/cm2), which becomes prominent when compared to ohmic losses. In addition, concentration overpotentials change dramatically with CO2 flow rate, which results in significant differences in outlet concentrations at high conversions. The outlet concentration of CO attains a maximum of 80% along with 5% CO2 and 15% H2, although the maximum single-pass conversion is limited to below 60% due to homogeneous consumption by the electrolyte. Fundamental and practical implications of our findings on electrochemical CO2 reduction are discussed with a focus on the trade-off between high current density operation and high single-pass conversion efficiency. Accepted Author ManuscriptChemE/Materials for Energy Conversion & Storag

    Closing the Loop: Unexamined Performance Trade-Offs of Integrating Direct Air Capture with (Bi)carbonate Electrolysis

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    CO2 from carbonate-based capture solutions requires a substantial energy input. Replacing this step with (bi)carbonate electrolysis has been commonly proposed as an efficient alternative that coproduces CO/syngas. Here, we assess the feasibility of directly integrating air contactors with (bi)carbonate electrolyzers by leveraging process, multiphysics, microkinetic, and technoeconomic models. We show that the copresence of CO32- with HCO3- in the contactor effluent greatly diminishes the electrolyzer performance and eventually results in a reduced CO2 capture fraction to ≤1%. Additionally, we estimate suitable effluents for (bi)carbonate electrolysis to require 5-14 times larger contactors than conventionally needed contactors, leading to unfavorable process economics. Notably, we show that the regeneration of the capture solvent inside (bi)carbonate electrolyzers is insufficient for CO2 recapture. Thus, we suggest process modifications that would allow this route to be operationally feasible. Overall, this work sheds light on the practical operation of integrated direct air capture with (bi)carbonate electrolysis.ChemE/Process Systems EngineeringChemE/Materials for Energy Conversion and Storag
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