A silver–copper oxide catalyst for acetate electrosynthesis from carbon monoxide

Abstract

Acetic acid is an important chemical feedstock. The electrocatalytic synthesis of acetic acid from CO2 offers a low-carbon alternative to traditional synthetic routes, but the direct reduction from CO2 comes with a CO2 crossover energy penalty. CO electroreduction bypasses this, which motivates the interest in a cascade synthesis approach of CO2 to CO followed by CO to acetic acid. Here we report a catalyst design strategy in which off-target intermediates (such as ethylene and ethanol) in the reduction of CO to acetate are destabilized. On the optimized Ag–CuO2 catalyst, this destabilization of off-target intermediates leads to an acetate Faradaic efficiency of 70% at 200 mA cm−2. We demonstrate 18 hours of stable operation in a membrane electrode assembly; the system produced 5 wt% acetate at 100 mA cm−2 and a full-cell energy efficiency of 25%, a twofold improvement on the highest energy-efficient electrosynthesis in prior reports.

Description

Keywords

renewable energy, electrocatalysis

Citation

Dorakhan, R., Grigioni, I., Lee, B. H., Ou, P., Abed, J., O’Brien, C., ... & Sargent, E. H. (2023). A silver–copper oxide catalyst for acetate electrosynthesis from carbon monoxide. Nature Synthesis, 2(5), 448-457.

ISSN

2731-0582

Creative Commons

Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International

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