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Enhanced ethylene selectivity during CO2 reduction using polymers with intrinsic microporosity at copper gas diffusion electrodes

Enhanced ethylene selectivity during CO2 reduction using polymers with intrinsic microporosity at copper gas diffusion electrodes
Enhanced ethylene selectivity during CO2 reduction using polymers with intrinsic microporosity at copper gas diffusion electrodes
CO2 reduction is a rapidly expanding area, and a key part of the global mission to reduce carbon emissions and reduce our impact on our environment. The CO2 reduction reaction (CO2RR) presents a synthetic route to a number of industrially relevant materials, such as methane, ethylene, formate and CO.1 This provides a two-fold environmental benefit; CO2 can be captured from industrial processes before being released into the environment and produce a material usually sourced from fossil fuels.

Much work has been dedicated to CO2RR at copper electrodes thanks to its ability to produce C2 species such ethylene with reasonable selectivity. However, the currently attainable selectivity is not sufficient for practical applications. The outflow contains mixtures of CO2RR products, along with a substantial amount of H2 from water reduction at the same potentials.

This work improves the selectivity of copper gas diffusion electrodes (GDEs) towards ethylene using Polymers with Intrinsic Microporosity (PIMs). PIMs are easily drop-cast onto the GDE, forming a microporous layer at the catalyst – electrolyte interface. The microporous structure stores gases in a triphasic interface at the electrode surface,2 which has previously been shown to improve catalyst activity towards oxygen reduction.3

We show that the introduction of a PIMs triphasic interface to copper GDEs improves the CO2RR towards ethylene, evidenced by an increased Faradaic efficiency, improved GDE stability and shift in the reduction wave to lower overpotentials.4 The impact of the PIMs is significantly dependent on the loading, with thin layers enhancing performance, but thicker layers having a surprisingly detrimental effect. This work is a proof of concept, showing the potential of triphasic interfaces for enhancing the activity of GDEs for CO2RR towards ethylene production
Perry, Samuel Charles
8e204d86-4a9c-4a5d-9932-cf470174648e
Gateman, Samantha Michelle
d184f9aa-cae8-4fcd-bf9b-60fb219b5432
Malpass-Evans, Richard
4328976b-ce5c-4d4e-9d8f-d4b4def8645c
McKeown, Neil
3459b0b8-1dff-4a98-a141-fafcae610847
Wegener, Moritz
e585873e-16c0-440c-b17f-5442f014415a
Nazarovs, Pāvels
85218d6a-4018-4786-aab0-ed028e1b2c2c
Mauzeroll, Janine
af84f034-1e52-4419-a1c2-ce7116db5b07
Wang, Ling
c50767b1-7474-4094-9b06-4fe64e9fe362
Ponce-de-Leon-Albarran, Carlos
508a312e-75ff-4bcb-9151-dacc424d755c
Perry, Samuel Charles
8e204d86-4a9c-4a5d-9932-cf470174648e
Gateman, Samantha Michelle
d184f9aa-cae8-4fcd-bf9b-60fb219b5432
Malpass-Evans, Richard
4328976b-ce5c-4d4e-9d8f-d4b4def8645c
McKeown, Neil
3459b0b8-1dff-4a98-a141-fafcae610847
Wegener, Moritz
e585873e-16c0-440c-b17f-5442f014415a
Nazarovs, Pāvels
85218d6a-4018-4786-aab0-ed028e1b2c2c
Mauzeroll, Janine
af84f034-1e52-4419-a1c2-ce7116db5b07
Wang, Ling
c50767b1-7474-4094-9b06-4fe64e9fe362
Ponce-de-Leon-Albarran, Carlos
508a312e-75ff-4bcb-9151-dacc424d755c

Perry, Samuel Charles, Gateman, Samantha Michelle, Malpass-Evans, Richard, McKeown, Neil, Wegener, Moritz, Nazarovs, Pāvels, Mauzeroll, Janine, Wang, Ling and Ponce-de-Leon-Albarran, Carlos (2020) Enhanced ethylene selectivity during CO2 reduction using polymers with intrinsic microporosity at copper gas diffusion electrodes. ECS Meeting Abstracts, MA2020-02. (doi:10.1149/MA2020-02633255mtgabs).

Record type: Meeting abstract

Abstract

CO2 reduction is a rapidly expanding area, and a key part of the global mission to reduce carbon emissions and reduce our impact on our environment. The CO2 reduction reaction (CO2RR) presents a synthetic route to a number of industrially relevant materials, such as methane, ethylene, formate and CO.1 This provides a two-fold environmental benefit; CO2 can be captured from industrial processes before being released into the environment and produce a material usually sourced from fossil fuels.

Much work has been dedicated to CO2RR at copper electrodes thanks to its ability to produce C2 species such ethylene with reasonable selectivity. However, the currently attainable selectivity is not sufficient for practical applications. The outflow contains mixtures of CO2RR products, along with a substantial amount of H2 from water reduction at the same potentials.

This work improves the selectivity of copper gas diffusion electrodes (GDEs) towards ethylene using Polymers with Intrinsic Microporosity (PIMs). PIMs are easily drop-cast onto the GDE, forming a microporous layer at the catalyst – electrolyte interface. The microporous structure stores gases in a triphasic interface at the electrode surface,2 which has previously been shown to improve catalyst activity towards oxygen reduction.3

We show that the introduction of a PIMs triphasic interface to copper GDEs improves the CO2RR towards ethylene, evidenced by an increased Faradaic efficiency, improved GDE stability and shift in the reduction wave to lower overpotentials.4 The impact of the PIMs is significantly dependent on the loading, with thin layers enhancing performance, but thicker layers having a surprisingly detrimental effect. This work is a proof of concept, showing the potential of triphasic interfaces for enhancing the activity of GDEs for CO2RR towards ethylene production

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Published date: 23 November 2020

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 491071
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/491071
PURE UUID: 1a74feab-2857-441f-852e-24cec893927f
ORCID for Samuel Charles Perry: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6263-6114
ORCID for Ling Wang: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2894-6784
ORCID for Carlos Ponce-de-Leon-Albarran: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1907-5913

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Date deposited: 11 Jun 2024 23:49
Last modified: 12 Jun 2024 01:56

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Contributors

Author: Samuel Charles Perry ORCID iD
Author: Samantha Michelle Gateman
Author: Richard Malpass-Evans
Author: Neil McKeown
Author: Moritz Wegener
Author: Pāvels Nazarovs
Author: Janine Mauzeroll
Author: Ling Wang ORCID iD

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