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Scalable electrosynthesis of commodity chemicals from biomass by suppressing non-Faradaic transformations

Hua Zhou, Yue Ren, Bingxin Yao, Zhenhua Li, Ming Xu, Lina Ma, Xianggui Kong, Lirong Zheng, Mingfei Shao, Haohong Duan

2023Nature Communications212 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Electrooxidation of biomass platforms provides a sustainable route to produce valuable oxygenates, but the practical implementation is hampered by the severe carbon loss stemming from inherent instability of substrates and/or intermediates in alkaline electrolyte, especially under high concentration. Herein, based on the understanding of non-Faradaic degradation, we develop a single-pass continuous flow reactor (SPCFR) system with high ratio of electrode-area/electrolyte-volume, short duration time of substrates in the reactor, and separate feeding of substrate and alkaline solution, thus largely suppressing non-Faradaic degradation. By constructing a nine-stacked-modules SPCFR system, we achieve electrooxidation of glucose-to-formate and 5-hydroxymethylfurfural (HMF)-to-2,5-furandicarboxylic acid (FDCA) with high single-pass conversion efficiency (SPCE; 81.8% and 95.8%, respectively) and high selectivity (formate: 76.5%, FDCA: 96.9%) at high concentrations (formate: 562.8 mM, FDCA: 556.9 mM). Furthermore, we demonstrate continuous and kilogram-scale electrosynthesis of potassium diformate (0.7 kg) from wood and soybean oil, and FDCA (1.17 kg) from HMF. This work highlights the importance of understanding and suppressing non-Faradaic degradation, providing opportunities for scalable biomass upgrading using electrochemical technology.

Topics & Concepts

Faraday efficiencyFormateElectrolyteBiomass (ecology)Commodity chemicalsElectrosynthesisDegradation (telecommunications)ChemistryChemical engineeringMaterials scienceElectrochemistryElectrodeOrganic chemistryCatalysisComputer scienceGeologyOceanographyEngineeringTelecommunicationsPhysical chemistryElectrocatalysts for Energy ConversionCatalysis for Biomass ConversionCatalysis and Hydrodesulfurization Studies