1 research outputs found
Potential Cycling of Silver Cathodes in an Alkaline CO<sub>2</sub> Flow Electrolyzer for Accelerated Stress Testing and Carbonate Inhibition
The electrochemical reduction of CO2 (CO2RR) holds promise for the reduction of environmentally taxing
CO2 emissions, for the carbon-neutral production of valuable
fuels and chemicals, and for storage of excess renewable energy from
intermittent sources such as wind and solar in chemical products.
Durability of cathodes used in high-throughput CO2RR systems
is of paramount importance for the commercial readiness of the CO2RR technology. In this study, we investigate the durability
of silver-coated gas diffusion electrode cathodes under potential
cycling conditions to simulate the impact of repeated cycles of startup
and shutdown as might be experienced in connection with a variable
renewable power source. We determine that cycling can impact the cathode via two distinct degradation mechanisms: (1) carbonate formation
at negative potentials and (2) catalyst layer restructuring and loss
in the relatively positive “oxide formation” potential
range. We also explore tailored potential cycling as a mechanism for
inhibiting carbonate formation by interrupting the high concentration
of OH– at the catalyst layer. The findings from
this work lend insight into the types of variable potential operating
conditions under which CO2RR systems can deliver continuous,
robust performance