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When Flooding Is Not Catastrophic Woven Gas Diffusion Electrodes Enable Stable CO2Electrolysis

Authors :
Baumgartner, Lorenz M.
Koopman, Christel I.
Forner-Cuenca, Antoni
Vermaas, David A.
Membrane Materials and Processes
EIRES System Integration
EIRES Chem. for Sustainable Energy Systems
Source :
ACS Applied Energy Materials, 5(12), ACS Applied Energy Materials, 5(12), 15125-15135. American Chemical Society
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Electrochemical CO2reduction has the potential to use excess renewable electricity to produce hydrocarbon chemicals and fuels. Gas diffusion electrodes (GDEs) allow overcoming the limitations of CO2mass transfer but are sensitive to flooding from (hydrostatic) pressure differences, which inhibits upscaling. We investigate the effect of the flooding behavior on the CO2reduction performance. Our study includes six commercial gas diffusion layer materials with different microstructures (carbon cloth and carbon paper) and thicknesses coated with a Ag catalyst and exposed to differential pressures corresponding to different flow regimes (gas breakthrough, flow-by, and liquid breakthrough). We show that physical electrowetting further limits the flow-by regime at commercially relevant current densities (≥200 mA cm-2), which reduces the Faradaic efficiency for CO (FECO) for most carbon papers. However, the carbon cloth GDE maintains its high CO2reduction performance despite being flooded with the electrolyte due to its bimodal pore structure. Exposed to pressure differences equivalent to 100 cm height, the carbon cloth is able to sustain an average FECOof 69% at 200 mA cm-2even when the liquid continuously breaks through. CO2electrolyzers with carbon cloth GDEs are therefore promising for scale-up because they enable high CO2reduction efficiency while tolerating a broad range of flow regimes.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
25740962
Volume :
5
Issue :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
ACS Applied Energy Materials
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bdf09c7642ab6bb181dbf8e5dc9480c1
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/acsaem.2c02783