Electroosmotic flow steers neutral products and enables concentrated ethanol electroproduction from CO2

Abstract

Electrochemical reduction of carbon dioxide (CO2RR) converts intermittent renewable energy into high energy density fuels, such as ethanol. Membrane electrode assembly (MEA) electrolyzers are particularly well-suited to CO2-to-ethanol conversion in view of their low ohmic resistance and high stability. However, over 75% of the ethanol produced at the cathode migrates through the membrane where it is diluted by the anolyte and may be oxidized. The ethanol concentration that results is two orders of magnitude below the 10 wt% standard set by the incumbent industrial process, fermentation. Here, we reverse the direction of ion and electroosmotic transport by means of a porous proton exchange layer, and thereby block both the convective and diffusive routes of ethanol loss. With this strategy, we eliminate ethanol crossover to the anode (< 1%), and achieve an ethanol concentration of 13.1 wt% directly from the cathode outlet.

Description

Keywords

CO2 electroreduction, carbon utilization, catalysis, electrolyzer, ethanol, downstream separation, liquid crossover, polymer electrolyte, membrane electrode assembly

Citation

Miao, R.K., Xu, Y., Ozden, A., Robb, A., O’Brien, C.P., Gabardo, C.M., Lee, G., Edwards, J.P., Huang, J.E., Fan, M., Wang, X., Liu, S., Yan, Y., Sargent, E.H., Sinton, D. (2021). Electroosmotic flow steers neutral products and enables concentrated ethanol electroproduction from CO2. Joule 5, 2742–2753. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.joule.2021.08.013

ISSN

25424351

Creative Commons

Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International

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