Litcius/Paper detail

Managing Hydration at the Cathode Enables Efficient CO<sub>2</sub> Electrolysis at Commercially Relevant Current Densities

Angelica Reyes, Ryan P. Jansonius, Benjamin A. W. Mowbray, Yang Cao, Danika G. Wheeler, Jacky Chau, David Dvořák, Curtis P. Berlinguette

2020ACS Energy Letters207 citationsDOI

Abstract

Gas-fed CO2 electrochemical flow reactors are appealing platforms for the electrolytic conversion of CO2 into fuels and chemical feedstocks at commercially relevant current densities (≥100 mA/cm2). An inherent challenge in the development of these reactors is delivering sufficient water to the cathode to sustain the CO2 reduction reaction, while also preventing accumulation of excess water at the porous cathode (i.e., flooding). We present herein experimental evidence showing cathode flooding in a zero-gap electrolyzer at 200 mA/cm2. This flooding causes a 37% decrease in partial current density for CO production (jCO) along with a 450 mV increase in cell voltage (Ecell). We show that the detrimental effects associated with this flooding can be mitigated by pairing thin membranes (i.e., ≤40 μm) with hydrophobic cathodes to enable CO2 electrolysis at commercially relevant conditions (jCO ≥ 100 mA/cm2 and Ecell < 3 V).

Topics & Concepts

CathodeElectrolysisPolymer electrolyte membrane electrolysisElectrolysis of waterElectrochemistryElectrolyteCurrent densityCurrent (fluid)Chemical engineeringMaterials scienceElectrowinningHigh-pressure electrolysisElectrolytic cellFlooding (psychology)ChemistryElectrodeElectrical engineeringPsychologyPsychotherapistEngineeringQuantum mechanicsPhysical chemistryPhysicsCO2 Reduction Techniques and CatalystsAdvanced battery technologies researchElectrocatalysts for Energy Conversion