Electrochemical CO2 Reduction to Methane
Nation-modified electrodes for the CO2 reduction reaction (CO2RR) to hydrocarbon products. Depending on the thickness of the Nation membrane and its admixture with other polymers, CO2 reduction occurs principally at the electrode-polymer interface. A Nation overlayer of 15 μm on a Cu electrode enables an extraordinarily high yield of CH4 production (88% Faradaic efficiency) at a low overpotential (540 mV). Other embodiments directed to admixtures of Nation and other polymers and/or cocatalysts, various metal substrates and electrolyte solutions which comprise an aprotic solvent in addition to a bicarbonate solution show impact on the Faradaic efficiency, yield and carbon-based products produced by the present invention.
This application claims the benefit of priority of U.S. provisional application Ser. No. 63/014,338 filed Apr. 23, 2020, the entire contents of which application is incorporated herein.
FIELD OF THE INVENTIONThis invention relates to the production of methane and other carbon-based chemical products in electrochemical reactions involving the reduction of carbon dioxide. This invention is also directed to polymer coated metal substrates (electrodes) which find use in reducing carbon dioxide/bicarbonate to hydrocarbons, organic acids and alcohols, among other carbon-based products.
BACKGROUND AND OVERVIEW OF THE INVENTIONThe accelerated increase of CO2 concentrations in the atmosphere due to anthropogenic activities is causing a host of economic and environmental issues such as coastal flooding, increased catastrophic weather events, shifting agricultural productivities, and decreased biodiversity. The global CO2 concentration measured at the Mauna Loa Observatory in April 2021 was 418 ppm.1 In the 1960s, CO2 levels increased approximately 0.6 ppm per year, and this rate rose to approximate 2 ppm per year in the last decade.2 To combat rising global CO2 levels in a world with an economy heavily dependent upon fossil fuels, chemical carbon mitigation aims to capture atmospheric CO2 and convert it to value-added products.3 Electrochemical reduction of CO2 to synthetic fuels using renewable energy sources is a promising approach to store energy into chemical bonds for industrial applications4 and is a renewable and efficient method of reducing CO2 to various products based on multiple electron transfer mechanisms.5,6,7,8
Electrochemical CO2 reduction has been of interest for many decades because it is a viable pathway to produce synthetic fuels in aqueous electrolytes and at room temperatures. This method presents a promising path towards establishing a carbon-neutral cycle.9,10 However, there are still major drawbacks that limit the commercialization of CO2 reduction catalysts. The main problems associated with electrochemical CO2 reduction are the high overpotentials required to reduce CO2, poor product selectivity, and low Faradaic efficiencies due to the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) that occurs at similar reduction potentials as CO2.11,12 The high overpotentials and poor product selectivity are due to the adsorption energies of key reaction intermediates.13,14,15 Therefore, novel electrocatalysts for CO2 reduction need to be designed that are robust and selective while lowering overpotentials.
Of all the catalysts tested for electrochemical CO2 reduction, Cu-based materials are the only class of catalysts that have demonstrated high activity toward more reduced hydrocarbons and alcohols.10,11,12,16,17 In 1985, electrochemical CO2 reduction on metal electrodes was pioneered by Hori and colleagues. Hori's work found that electrochemical CO2 reduction on a Cu electrode produced hydrocarbons, mainly methane (CH4) and ethylene (C2H4).18,19,20 Jaramillo and coworkers found that Cu electrodes produced 16 different products, out of which 12 are C2 or C3 species.21 In an attempt to understand product selectivity and to elucidate the mechanism of CO2 reduction, it was found that CO is a key intermediate in the formation of CH4 and C2H4,22 and that the products of CO2 reduction reaction depend on the metal's binding energy to CO.21 Based on these findings, one strategy for efficient electrochemical CO2 conversion is to separate the process into two steps: CO2 reduction to CO, followed by CO reduction to oxygenates and hydrocarbons.23
Nafion is a sulfonated fluoropolymer which has been used in proton exchange membrane fuel cells (PEMFCs) and electrochemical CO2 reduction reactions to separate the working electrode from the counter electrode to prevent the re-oxidation of products. In a previous study by Kim and coworkers, a thin layer of Nafion overlayer was introduced onto Pd-deposited TiO2 nanoparticles, which enhanced the photo-conversion of CO2 to methane and ethane under UV and solar irradiation without the use of electron donor.25
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONThe present invention is directed to CO2 reduction on polymeric, Nafion-modified electrodes and contemplates a mechanism in which CO2 reduction occurs in the presence of Nafion and Nafion based polymers. Previous work has only mixed catalysts with Nafion26 or used Nafion to separate the two sides of electrochemical devices.27 The present invention steps beyond the prior art in controlling proton transport by the thickness and composition of the Nafion layer on top of an electrode, that is, on an electrode surface in contact with an effective solution, preferably, an aqueous biocarbonate solution, which may include an aprotic reductively stable solvent such as acetonitrile (MeCN), dimethylformamide (DMF), dimethylacetamide (DMA), dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO), tetrahydrofuran (THF), propylene carbonate (PC) and alkyl nitriles (such as propylnitrile, butyl nitrile, adiponitrile, benzonitrile), among others.
In an embodiment, with an optimal Nafion layer, a copper electrode produces a remarkably high yield of methane (CH4), (Faradaic efficiency of 88.0%) at −0.38 V vs. RHE (reversible hydrogen electrode), which is evidently the highest yield for CH4 production from a CO2 reduction electrocatalyst and an unexpected result. It is hypothesized that the Nafion increases the CH4 yield by stabilizing an intermediate in which CO* is bound to the electrode surface and allows reduction of the CO intermediate to methane. Additional experiments show that providing the Nafion in admixture with at least one additional polymer at varying weight percentages, such as polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF), polyvinylpyrrolidine (PVP), polyethyleneglycol (PEG), polyvinylalcohol (PVA), polyethyleneimine (PEI), polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) and mixtures thereof, especially PVDF and PTFE, among others, enhances the production of alternative carbon products from CO2 (bicarbonate solution) such as formic acid (HCOOH), ethanol, ethylene, propylene and 1-propanol, among others. Often, when a polymer is admixed with Nafion, the polymer has a CO2 gas permeability ranging from 5×10−15 mol-cm/cm2-s-Pa to 5×10−18 mol-cm/cm2-s-Pa. Among these polymers are the highly permeable fluoropolymers polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) and polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), which are characterized as having CO2 permeabilities of 2.16×10−17 mol-cm/cm2-s-Pa and 5.15×10−16 mol-cm/cm2-s-Pa, respectively. Nafion has a CO2 permeability of 8.70×10−16 mol-cm/cm2-s-Pa. See, Flaconneche, et al., Oil Gas Sci. Technol.-Rev. IFP, 2001, 56(3), 261-278; Ren, et al., J. Electrochem. Soc., 2015, 162(10), F1221-F1230; and Giacobbe, et al., Matt. Lett., 1990, 9(4), 142-146. In still other embodiments, the polymer is admixed with nanoparticles or nanowires of cocatalysts such as copper (metallic), cuprous oxide (Cu2O), cupric oxide (CuO), Zn, zinc oxide (ZnO) or silver (Ag) or other metals to influence the Faradaic efficiency and/or the product mixture obtained from practicing the present invention.
In an embodiment, the invention is directed to metal substrate electrodes which are uniformly coated with polymeric materials comprising of Nafion polymer, alone or in admixture with other polymers and/or cocatalysts as described herein, which facilitates the efficient reduction of carbon dioxide into reduced carbon-containing chemical compounds including hydrocarbons (e.g., methane, ethane, propane, ethylene and/or propylene), organic acids and alcohols such as methanol, ethanol and 1-propanol, among others. Polymers (principally as dispersions of Nafion or Nafion and another polymer as described herein ranging from 1% to 20-25% by weight polymer, often about 5-15% by weight polymer in aqueous solvent) are deposited onto metal substrates at uniform thicknesses ranging from 1 μm to 90-100 μm. Often the polymer coating has a uniform thickness of 1-30 μm, more often 1-20 μm or 2-15 μm (for Nafion polymers) and 20 to 90-100 μm, often 20-90 μm (for Nafion/other polymer admixtures) using methods which are well known in the art, such as drop-casting, spin coating, spray-coating and blade-containing, among others known in the art. After deposition, the polymer coating is dried (e.g. air-dried or dried using hot air dryer) to remove aqueous solvent and what remains is a uniform coating of desired thickness.
The polymer composition of the coating is often solely or principally Nafion (to produce methane gas efficiently, but the Nafion may be admixed with another polymer such as polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF), polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), polyvinylpyrrolidine (PVP), polyethyleneglycol (PEG), polyvinylalcohol (PVA), polyethyleneimine (PEI) or mixtures thereof, especially PVDF and PTFE). In polymer overcoatings, the Nafion comprises between 5% and 100% by weight of the polymer coating, often more than 40-50% by weight of the polymer coating, with the remaining portion of the polymer coating comprising one or more of the above described polymers and/or cocatalysts in admixture with the Nafion. In embodiments, a cocatalyst such as nanoparticles ranging from 1-500 nm in diameter or nanowires of copper (metallic), cuprous oxide (Cu2O), cupric oxide (CuO), Zn, zinc oxide (ZnO) or silver (Ag) or other metals is added to the Nafion polymer or Nafion polymer admixture in an effective amount, preferably ranging from 0.5% to 50%, often 5% to 30% often 10-15%, most often approximately 10% by weight of the polymer coating. The inclusion of cocatalyst may assist in facilitating (increasing the Faradaic efficiency) the production of and/or influencing the type of carbon products produced by the CO2 reduction reaction produced by the present invention. The cocatalysts are incorporated into the polymer coating by mixing the nanoparticles with the polymer(s) to provide a uniform suspension by stirring, sonication and/or heating and the suspension of polymer and cocatalyst nanoparticles and/or nanowires are deposited on the metal substrate by drop-casting, spin coating, spray-coating and blade-containing, followed by drying to a uniform coating.
In an embodiment, the invention is directed to metal substrates (electrodes) which are coated with a uniform polymer coating and which function as electrodes in a CO2 reduction apparatus or cell as depicted in
In embodiments, the substrate/electrode may be any size or thickness that is appropriate for the apparatus or cell, including experimental cells of relatively small size and commercial embodiments of great size for industrial applications. The size and thickness of the substrate does not impact the rate (current density) or extent of product and is otherwise not a critical feature for the process of the present invention and the electrochemical reaction to reduce CO2 produces the same result because the reaction takes place on the electrode at the polymer-electrode interface. The current of the reaction scales linearly with the electrode area, so the reaction can work with any size substrate.
In embodiments, the electrolyte solution is a bicarbonate solution ranging from 0.01 M to 1.1 M bicarbonate (the solubility of bicarbonate in water at room temperature), although solutions of 0.05 M to 0.2 M are often used and 0.1M bicarbonate is most often used. In embodiments, an aprotic solvent is added to the electrolyte solution (at a volume percent ranging from 1% to 95% of the electrolyte solution, often 20-80% by volume or 40-60% by volume and most often approximately 50% by volume of the electrolyte solution to influence the organic products produced from the CO2 reduction reaction. It was determined experimentally that the inclusion of an effective amount of an aprotic solvent such as acetonitrile (MeCN), dimethylformamide (DMF), dimethylacetamide (DMA), dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO), tetrahydrofuran (THF), propylene carbonate (PC) and alkyl nitriles (such as propylnitrile, butyl nitrile, adiponitrile, benzonitrile), among others tends to inhibit the reduction reaction to some extent (because fewer protons are available) resulting in products such as ethylene, methanol, ethanol, propanol and formic acid as well as carbon products of higher carbon number because of the promotion of CO* intermediate dimerization or trimerization at the electrode surface and the reduced proton concentration of the reduction environment.
In embodiments, to provide electrolyte solutions, CO2 is often bubbled through a solution which may be buffered to maintain high local concentrations of bicarbonate within the ranges specified above. The pH of the electrolyte solution generally reflects the concentration of the bicarbonate in solution with solvent and/or buffer effects influencing the pH of the solution. At equilibrium solution concentration, the pH of the solution is approximately 6.8, although the pH may range substantially depending on the concentration of the biocarbonate and other components (other solvents/buffering agents) in solution.
In embodiments, the metal substrate/electrode comprises a uniform polymer layer on the surface of the substrate having a thickness ranging from 1 μm to 90-100 μm, with a polymer which contains Nafion as its sole polymeric component ranging from 1 μm to 30 μm, often 2 μm to 20 μm or 2 μm to 15 μm. In the case of admixtures of Nafion and other polymers, often fluoropolymers such as polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) and/or polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) or other polymers such as polyethyleneglycol (PEG), polyvinylalcohol (PVA) or polyethyleneimine (PEI) as described herein, the thickness of the coating on the metal substrate will often range from 20-100 μm and above, often 20-90 μm.
Generally, the CO2 reduction reactions of the present invention are conducted within the apparatus or cell using a voltage ranging from −0.2 V to −2 V vs. RHE (reversible hydrogen electrode). The current (expressed as current density) which is used in the electrolytic processes to reduce CO2 to carbon-based products as described herein ranges from 1-100 milliamps per cm2, often 10-100 milliamps per cm2.
In embodiments, a high amount of methane gas (CH4) is produced using a uniform Nafion polymer (alone) overcoating ranging from 2 to 15 μm on a copper electrode (Faradaic efficiency of 50+%) at an effective voltage (very negative reduction potentials). In embodiments, methane gas (CH4) is produced using a uniform Nafion polymer (alone) overcoating of approximately 15 μm on a copper electrode (Faradaic efficiency of 88.0%) at −0.38 V vs. RHE (reversible hydrogen electrode).
In embodiments, the inclusion of effective amounts of an additional polymer in admixture with Nafion (in embodiments, the polymer is polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF), polyvinylpyrrolidine (PVP), polyethyleneglycol (PEG), polyvinylalcohol (PVA), polyethyleneimine (PEI), polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) or mixtures thereof) favors the production of formate at less negative reduction potentials.
In embodiments, the production of ethylene gas is favored when copper alloys are used, when the alloy electrode has a hydrophobic coating comprising an effective amount of PVDF in admixture with Nafion and when aprotic solvents as otherwise described herein (often acetonitrile) are used in effective amounts in combination with a bicarbonate in the electrolyte solution. Thus, the invention provides that methane gas formulation is favored using Nafion copolymer (in the absence of any other copolymer) of uniform thickness between 2 and 15 μm or 10 and 15 μm, more often approximately 15 μm at an effective voltage between −0.2 V and −2.0 V vs. RHE. In embodiments, the production of formate is favored in a hydrophobic polymer environment comprising a uniform overlayer of Nafion in combination with an effective amount of copolymer, especially PVDF, as described herein above. In embodiments, ethylene production is favored by the use of hydrophobic fluoropolymer (PVFD and/or PTFE) in admixture with Nafion on an alloy (often copper alloy) electrode. In embodiments, the inclusion of a nanoparticulate, nanowire cocatalyst or covalently bonded cocatalyst into the Nafion polymer or additional polymer may enhance the formation of CO* intermediates and methane and/or ethylene products, especially on copper electrodes.
The apparatus shown in
It is noted that, as used in this specification and the appended claims, the singular forms “a,” “an,” and “the,” include plural referents unless expressly and unequivocally limited to one referent. Thus, for example, reference to “a compound” can include two or more different compounds depending on the context of the use of the term. As used herein, the term “include” and its grammatical variants are intended to be non-limiting, such that recitation of items in a list is not to the exclusion of other like items that can be substituted or other items that can be added to the listed items.
The term “effective” is used to describe an amount of a component, an element, an energy source, a reactant, precursor or product which is used in or produced by the present invention to produce an intended result.
The term “uniform” is used to describe the polymer overcoating which is used to coat the metal substrate pursuant to the present invention. As used, a uniform overcoating is a coating on a metal substrate pursuant to the present invention which has a measured thickness at all areas of the coating within 10%± of the designated thickness.
The term “Faradaic efficiency” (synonymously faradaic yield, coulombic efficiency or current efficiency) is used to describe the efficiency with which charge (electrons) is transferred in a system facilitating an electrochemical reaction, in the present invention, the reduction of CO2 to one or more carbon-containing products. In other words, Faradaic efficiency is the percent yield of product based on the number of electrons transferred during the reaction. A higher percentage yield of product using a lower number of transferred electrons provides higher Faradaic efficiency. In the present invention, the number of electrons is the limiting reactant, not carbon dioxide and a higher Faradaic efficiency is the desired outcome. Many CO2 reduction catalysts have low Faradaic efficiencies for carbon products in aqueous electrolytes because (fast) electron transfer can also occur to protons in water to create hydrogen gas, reducing the yield of the desired carbon product. The regulated proton transfer rates with the polymer overcoatings using in the present invention very often increases the Faradaic efficiency of the CO2 reduction reaction(s), a particularly favorable and unexpected result.
The inventors found that there was a relationship between the Faradaic efficiency of the CO2 reduction reaction and the selectivity of the carbon-based products which are produced reflective of the polymeric overcoating and electrolyte solution used. For example, the inventors found that an extraordinarily high amount of CH4 (at 88% Faradaic efficiency) is generated using a Cu electrode modified with a 15 μm Nafion overlayer at −0.4 V vs. RHE. In contrast to the present invention, on unmodified metal electrodes, a more negative voltage is required to give rise to higher Faradaic efficiencies of CH4. As shown in the examples section hereof, high formate Faradaic efficiencies can be achieved by using PVDF-Nafion overlayers at a less negative voltage. Formate is favored in a hydrophobic environment because producing water as a CO2 reduction product is unfavorable. Since formate is the only CO2 reduction product in which water is not produced concomitantly, a hydrophobic electrode favors formate production pursuant to the present invention.
Thus, as shown in the examples section, a copper electrode modified with 52 wt. % PVDF in Nafion at −0.14 V vs. RHE gives reasonably high formate yield (58%). This yield of formate is fairly high for a Cu-based catalyst, and most previous works used other metals to produce high formate yields such as 81% and 98%. There is some literature precedent, however, for Cu-based catalysts that achieve high formate yields including a Cu—Au catalyst that produces formate at a 81% Faradaic efficiency at −0.4 V vs. RHE.5 Cu2O nanoparticle films also generated formate at 98% Faradaic efficiency under high pressure (≥45 atm) at −0.64 V vs. RHE. The authors of this work also found that at more negative potentials formate decreased.6 Comparing the present invention to previous studies it seems that formate production is favored at lower voltages, especially around from −0.4 to −0.6 V vs. RHE.
Reasonably high yields of C2H4 (75%) is generated when an alloy substrate is modified by PVDF-Nafion overlayers on a Cu—Zn alloy (brass, 62% Cu and 37% Zn). In addition, C2H4 is produced in the presence of acetonitrile in the bicarbonate electrolyte (higher volume percent, ie. 75% of acetonitrile generates more C2H4 than lower volume percent). Lastly, Cu electrodes modified with Teflon-Nafion overlayers favor the production C2H4 while simultaneous hindering CO production. Chen and coworkers fabricated Cu, Cu—Ag, and Cu—Sn alloy films that exhibited high Faradaic efficiencies (60%) for C2H4 production.7 The origin of the high C2H4 production is attributed to the presence of alloys, which leads to the increased CO density on the electrode surface. In addition, higher local pH near the electrode surface also contributes to C2H4 production because CO* dimerization and C2H4 formation.
In addition, alcohols such as methanol, ethanol, and 1-propanol are generated in the presence of acetonitrile/bicarbonate electrolyte on unmodified Cu electrodes or Cu electrodes modified with 15 μm Nafion overlayer.
The term “Nafion” is used to describe Nafion (CAS Name Perfluoro-3,6-dioxa-4-methyl-7-octenesulfonic acid-tetrafluoroethylene copolymer, also IUPAC name 1,1,2,2-tetrafluoroethene; 1,1,2,2-tetrafluoro-2-[1,1,1,2,3,3-hexafluoro-3-(1,2,2-trifluoroethenoxy)propan-2-yl]oxyethanesulfonic acid), which is a sulfonated fluoropolymer which has a hydrophobic perfluorinated polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) backbone with side chains terminated by strongly acidic hydrophilic sulfonic acid groups. The protons on the sulfonic acid groups are responsible for providing proton conductivity. Nafion can be formulated as a dispersion in water/alcohol (ethanol/I-propanol) in the acidic form. A preferred dispersion of Nafion, Nafion D520, D521, D2020 and D2021 (with Nafion polymer in the dispersion ranging from 5% by weight up to 20% by weight) can be purchased from the Chemours Company, Wilmngton Del., USA. Nafion may be admixed with other polymers to form admixtures which are used as overcoatings of the metal substrate in the present invention.
While not being limited by way of theory, it appears that Nafion has provided enhanced efficiency of CO2 reduction in the present invention for at least the following three reasons, among others. First, Nafion is a gas permeable superacid and an excellent proton conductor, and it is believed that the Nafion layer enhances the local activity of protons on the surface of the metal substrate which are necessary for increased Faradaic efficiency of CO2 reduction. Second, CO* is believed to be stabilized between the substrate/polymer interface, which would favor electron transfer to the intermediates to form more highly reduced products, especially when considering the enhanced local activity of protons by Nafion. Third, Nafion is stable against photocatalytic oxidation and is inert toward photoinduced redox reactions, thus forcing the equilibrium reactions toward reduction products rather than back to oxidized precursors.
The term “overpotential” is used to describe the difference in potential which exists between a thermodynamically determined reduction potential of a half-reaction and the potential at which the redox event is experimentally observed. The term is directly related to a cell's voltage efficiency. In an electrolytic cell the existence of overpotential indicates that the cell requires more energy than is thermodynamically expected to drive a reaction. The quantity of overpotential is specific to each cell design and varies across cells and operational conditions, even for the same reaction. Overpotential is experimentally determined by measuring the potential at which a given current density is achieved.
Mechanism of ActionA following description of proposed mechanisms for CO2 reduction pursuant to the present invention provides a basis for the formation of methane, formate, ethylene and other carbon-based produced according to the present invention.
The above-described mechanisms are useful in predicting carbon-based products that can be produced pursuant to features of the present invention. For example, methane (CH4) production is favored when electrodes are modified with a Nafion overlayer and on unmodified electrodes at a very negative reduction potentials. The Nafion overlayer or coating provides unexpectedly high Faradaic efficiency for the production of methane. Formate is favored with hydrophobic electrodes (PVDF-Nafion overlayer) and at less negative reduction potentials. Ethylene (C2H4) is favored when Cu alloys are used, when the alloy electrode is hydrophobic (PVDF-Nafion overlayer), and when aprotic solvents are used in conjunction with the bicarbonate electrolyte. The inventors have concluded that formate can be further enhanced by creating a hydrophobic environment. C2H4 production can be enhanced by hydrophobic fluoropolymer-Nafion overlayers on an alloy electrode.
The following non-limiting examples further describe and support embodiments and further aspects of the present invention.
EXAMPLES First Set of ExperimentsThe first set of experiments presented herein are directed to a study of Nafion-modified electrodes for the CO2 reduction reaction (CO2RR) to hydrocarbon products. Nafion, described herein above, is a sulfonated polymer possessing high proton conductivity. By varying the thickness, substrates, and voltage, the inventors performed a detailed study of the effect of Nafion on metal and carbon mesh electrodes for CO2 reduction. These studies allowed for the elucidation of the mechanism in which CO2 reduction occurs on these Nafion-modified electrodes. Depending on the thickness of the polymeric membrane surface, CO2 reduction occurs at either the polymer-electrolyte interface or electrode-polymer interface. It was determined that a Nafion overlayer of 15 μm on Cu electrode enables extraordinary high yield of CH4 production (88% Faradaic efficiency) at a low overpotential (540 mV). To the best of our knowledge, this yield is the highest reported for electrocatalytic CO2 reduction to CH4 production at room temperature reported thus far. Other products detected include formate, CO, ethanol and methanol.
Experimental ProcedureMaterials and Electrode Preparation.
Nafion D520 dispersion and carbon paper (AvCarb EP40T) were purchased from Fuel Cell Store. Cu and Zn foil were purchased from All-Foils, Inc, and Ni foil was purchased from Goodfellow, Inc. Sodium bicarbonate was purchased from Sigma Aldrich. CO2 and CO were purchased from Airgas. Nafion-modified electrodes were fabricated by drop-casting Nafion (D520 Dispersion) directly onto the substrate.
Electrochemical Measurements and Material Characterization.
All electrochemical measurements were performed using a VSP-300 Biologic Potentiostat. All electrochemical data were collected versus a Ag/AgCl reference electrode and converted to the reversible hydrogen electrode (RHE) scale by V(vs. RHE)=V(measured vs. Ag/AgCb+0.21+0.059*6.8 (where 6.8 is the pH of solution). All values are reported versus RHE. To evaluate the CO2 reduction activity of the thin films, the working electrodes were studied in 0.1 M sodium bicarbonate buffer sparged with CO2 gas for at least 30 min using a one-compartment, three-electrode configuration (as set forth in
Product Determination. Electrochemical reactions were performed chronoamperometrically at −0.89 V vs. RHE (and at −0.38 V, −0.13 V, and 0.12 V vs. RHE for voltage-dependent experiments) for one hour using carbon as a counter electrode in a beaker for determining liquid and solid products and Pt wire as a counter electrode in a custom-made cell for determining gas products. During chronoamperometry, CO2 was continuously sparged through the solution at a rate of 5 cm3/min. Liquid products were quantified using a Varian 400 MHz NMR Spectrometer using DMF as an internal standard. The water in the reaction solution was evaporated under reduced pressure, and sodium formate along with other residual solids from the electrolyte were collected and dissolved in D2O. Liquid products were extracted from the reaction solution using deuterated chloroform. Gas products were quantified using a SRI 8610C gas chromatograph equipped with a flame ionization detector (FID) and a methanizer. The limits of detection for formate, liquid products, and gas products were determined to be 11 μM, 85 μM, and 1 ppm, respectively.
In addition to the positive shift of onset potential, the shapes of the LSVs for the carbon mesh and Cu substrates modified with 15 μm of Nafion are both relatively linear compared to the corresponding LSVs without Nafion, signifying that the electrochemical behavior of these electrodes are resistive. It is hypothesized herein that this increase in electrochemical resistance arises from impeded electron transfer through the thick Nafion layers.
Based on the observation that electron transfer is impeded by thick Nafion layers, contrasting experiments were performed with a hydrophobic polymer to block proton transfer to the CO2 reduction electrodes. Electrodes with a hydrophobic polymer were created by modifying carbon and Cu substrates with a 15 μm thick overlayer of polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF).
Taken together, the data in
Based on the LSV results presented, further investigation was undertaken to discern whether CO2 reduction occurs at the polymer-electrolyte interface (
To elucidate whether CO2 reduction is occurring at the polymer-electrolyte interface or at the electrode-polymer interface. CO2 reduction products were quantified using nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy (for liquid products) and gas chromatography (GC) (for gaseous products).
In addition to Faradaic efficiencies, product formation can also be expressed in terms of partial charge density and rates. Partial charge densities (
As previously demonstrated by linear sweep voltammetry (
To further verify that CO2 reduction is occurring at the electrode-polymer interface with a 15 μm overlayer, the thickness of Nafion was varied. Faradaic efficiencies as a function of Nafion thickness on a Cu electrode is presented in
Partial charge densities (
Voltage-dependent experiments are presented in
Given the remarkably high Faradaic efficiency for CH4 production by Nafion-modified Cu electrodes, several experiments were performed to gain insight into the mechanism of CO2 reduction under these conditions. First was an experiment in which sodium formate was added to the bicarbonate buffer in the absence of dissolved CO2. This experiment resulted in trace amounts of CO and no CH4 production, indicating that CO2 reduction to CH4 does not occur via a formate intermediate. Secondly, a CO reduction experiment was performed using a Cu electrode with a 15 μm thick Nafion overlayer at −0.38 V vs. RHE (the electrode with the highest Faradaic efficiency for CH4 production). This experiment yielded 38% Faradaic efficiency of CH4. The relatively high Faradaic efficiency for CH4 production using CO-sparged electrolyte indicates that a good portion of the formed CH4 in the CO2 reduction case originates from a CO intermediate. However, the observation that the Faradaic efficiency for CO reduction to CH4 is still significantly lower than the Faradaic efficiency for CO2 reduction to CH4 (88%) under the same experimental conditions suggests that additional factors need to be considered. In the pathway leading to CH4 formation, the protonation of CO to CHO on the electrode surface is the rate-determining step.14 Furthermore, previous studies suggest that CH4 formation is pH dependent and that CH4 formation is favored at lower pH values.30,31,32,33 CO2-saturated 0.1 M NaHCO3 electrolyte has a pH of 6.8 while the pH of CO-saturated electrolyte has a pH closer to 9. The abundance of H+ in a more acidic CO2-saturated electrolyte implies rapid protonation of the CO intermediate, favoring CH4 formation. The higher pH of the CO-saturated electrolyte yields less CH4 due to less H+ present in the electrolyte.
As described herein novel Nafion-modified electrodes have been fabricated that exhibit significantly enhanced CH4 production (up to 88% Faradaic efficiency) as a CO2 reduction product. With variation of the thickness, voltage, and substrate. CO2 reduction occurs at the electrode-polymer interface under the conditions that produced enhanced yields of CH4. It is posited that CO2 reduction to CH4 is significantly enhanced because Nafion helps to stabilize the Cu—CO* intermediate, which allows for the stabilized CO to be protonated and further reduced to CH4. In addition, the hydrophobic polymer PVDF hinders proton transfer, which results in increased hydrogen production and very inhibited carbon product formation. Future studies include tuning the hydrophilicity of Nafion to further modulate proton transfer rates by utilizing different polymer overlayer structures.
In this third set of experiments, the concepts which were established in the first two sets of experiments were extended to other substrates. A number of experiments were run as described in
As set forth in
The experiments evidence that the use of a uniform Nafion overcoating ranging from 2 to 15 μm (often 10-15 μm, most often 15 μm) on a copper electrode at an effective voltage using a bicarbonate solution (with no additional aprotic solvent in the solution) provides high Faradaic efficiency and dramatically high yield of methane gas.
Also evidenced by the experiments described herein, this work demonstrates that controlling the hydrophobicity of the electrode and proton availability of the electrolyte strongly dictates the production of different CO2 reduction products. Formate production is favored by a hydrophobic electrode, however, too hydrophobic causes mass transport issues because hydrophobic PVDF is less permeable to CO2. The decrease in proton concentration slows down the protonation of the M-CO intermediate to generate CH4, but promotes M-CO and M-CO coupling chemistry to produce C2+ products. This control of hydrophobicity by using polymer blends and mixed aprotic-protic solvent systems is a facile and effective method to tune the selectivity of CO2 reduction catalysts.
A skilled practitioner can predict carbon-based product selectivity from CO2 electrolysis reduction reactions by the design of the electrode, the electrode's polymer coating (including the thickness of the polymer coating) and the composition of the bicarbonate electrolyte solution used as the CO2 source. CH4 production is favored when electrodes are modified with a Nafion overlayer and on unmodified electrodes at a very negative reduction potentials. Formate is favored with hydrophobic electrodes (e.g. PVDF-Nafion overlayer) and at less negative reduction potentials. C2H4 is favored when Cu alloys are used, when the alloy electrode is hydrophobic (e.g. PVDF-Nafion overlayer), and when aprotic solvents are used in conjunction with the bicarbonate electrolyte. Further, the inventors have surmised that formate can be further enhanced by creating a hydrophobic environment on the electrode and/or in the electrolysis solution. C2H4 production can be enhanced by hydrophobic fluoropolymer-Nafion overlayers on an alloy electrode.
In addition, from the description of the present invention, the polymer overlayers as hosts for tandem catalysis. Cocatalysts can be nanoparticles and/or nanowires dispersed in the polymer overlayers or molecular species covalently attached to the polymer backbone. By coupling an electrode-bound catalyst that is selective for a partially reduced intermediate and with a membrane-bound catalysis that facilitates further reduction, one can envision the ready design of electrolysis systems utilizing CO2 reduction that selectively form desired products.
Supplemental Information Mass Transport Calculations Effect of Mass Transport on CO2 Electrocatalysis on Nafion/PVDF-Modified ElectrodesThe permeability of CO2 in PVDF and Nafion were taken to be 2.16×10−17 mol-cm/cm2-s-Pa and 8.70×10−6 mol-cm/cm2-s-Pa, two values obtained from Flaconneche, et al., Oil Gas Sci. Technol.-Rev. IFP. 2001, 56(3) and 261-278; Ren, et al., J. Electrochem. Soc., 2015, 162(10), F1221-F1230. The permeability of CO2 in PVDF-Nafion mixtures were calculated based on the weight percent of PVDF in Nafion multiplied by the permeability of CO2 in PVDF added to the weight percent of Nafion multiplied by the permeability of CO2 in Nafion. The thickness of the PVDF-Nafion overlayer was determined by cross-sectional SEM. Using the thickness of the PVDF-Nafion mixture (18 μm for 4 weight % PVDF in Nafion overlayer) and the pressure of CO2 is 1 atm. the flux of CO2 through the membrane is calculated to be 4.7×10−8 mol/cm2-s. This flux value is then compared to the maximum theoretical rate of consumption of CO2 at the electrode-polymer interface. The maximum CO2 consumption rate is determined from the steady state current of the chronoamperometry, assuming all CO2 is reduced to either CO or HCOOH. Because these products require only 2 e/mol, they consume CO2 faster than more highly reduced products such as CH4. Therefore, assuming a 100% yield of CO or HCOOH is an upper bound for the CO2 consumption rate. For the Cu electrode modified with 4 weight percent PVDF in Nafion overlayer, the steady state current density is −0.21 mA/cm2. From this value, the upper bound for the CO2 consumption rate is 1.1×10−9 mol/cm2-s, a value less than the calculated CO2 flux. Therefore, these calculations suggest that CO2 mass transport is not a limiting factor for this electrode.
However, for the Cu electrodes modified with 56, 60, and 64 weight percent PVDF in Nafion, the CO2 flux is less than the maximum theoretical CO2 consumption. This means at these higher weight percentages of PVDF in Nafion, CO2 mass transport does become a limiting factor and the availability of CO2 at the Cu-polymer interface is an issue.
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Claims
1. A method for CO2 reduction, comprising:
- providing an electrode having a layer of a predetermined uniform thickness of a polymeric composition; and
- placing the electrode with the layer of polymeric composition in contact with a solution effective for CO2 reduction, wherein said polymeric composition consists essentially of Nafion polymer or an admixture of Nafion in combination with another polymer and/or a cocatalyst.
2. The method defined in claim 1 wherein the polymeric composition is Nafion or Nafion in combination with at least one additional polymer selected from the group consisting of polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF), polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP), polyethyleneglycol (PEG), polyvinylalcohol (PVA), polyethyleneimine (PEI), polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) and mixtures thereof.
3. The method defined in claim 1 wherein the polymeric composition includes a fluoropolymer.
4. The method defined in claim 3 wherein the fluoropolymer is polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF, polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) or a mixture thereof.
5. The method defined in claim 2 wherein the at least one additional polymer is PDVF.
6. The method defined in claim 1 wherein the layer of the polymeric composition is Nafion having a thickness between approximately 2 μm and approximately 15 μm.
7. The method defined in claim 1 wherein the layer of the polymeric composition has a thickness effective to stabilize an intermediate in which CO is bound to the electrode coated with the layer of the polymeric composition.
8. The method defined in claim 2 wherein the layer of the polymeric composition has a thickness between approximately 20 μm and approximately 90 μm.
9. The method defined in claim 1, wherein the electrode is made of a material selected from the group consisting of carbon, copper, nickel and zinc and mixtures and alloys thereof.
10. The method defined in claim 1, wherein the electrode is made of a transition metal or transition metal alloy.
11. The method defined in claim 10 wherein the electrode is made of copper, zinc, silver, gold, cadmium, nickel, palladium, platinum or an alloy thereof.
12. The method of claim 10 wherein the electrode is made of copper or a copper alloy.
13. The method according to claim 12 wherein the copper alloy is brass (copper and zinc), bronze/phosphor bronze (copper and tin), naval brass (copper, zinc and tin), aluminum bronze (copper and aluminum), berylliumcopper (copper and beryllium), cupronickel (copper and nickel, and optionally iron and/or manganese), nickel silver (copper with nickel and zinc), copper silver (copper with silver) or copper gold (copper with gold).
14. The method defined in claim 13 wherein the copper alloy is brass.
15. The method defined in claim 10 wherein the layer of the polymeric composition has a thickness effective to stabilize an intermediate in which CO is bound to the electrode coated with the layer of polymeric composition.
16. The method defined in claim 1 wherein the solution is a bicarbonate solution or a bicarbonate solution further comprising an effective amount of an aprotic solvent.
17. The method according to claim 16 wherein said aprotic solvent is selected from the group consisting of acetonitrile (MeCN), dimethylformamide (DMF), dimethylacetamide DMA), dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO), tetrahydrofuran (THF), propylene carbonate (PC), or an alkyl nitrile (such as propylnitrile, butyl nitrile, adiponitrile, benzonitrile) or a mixture thereof.
18. The method according to claim 16 wherein said aprotic solvent is acetonitrile.
19. The method defined in claim 1, further comprising conducting an electrical current through said solution to said electrode at least in part through the layer of the polymeric composition.
20. The method defined in claim 1 wherein said polymeric composition further comprises a cocatalyst.
21. The method defined in claim 20 wherein said cocatalyst is in the form of a nanoparticle or a nanowire.
22. The method defined in claim 20 wherein said cocatalyst is made of copper (metallic), cuprous oxide (Cu2O), cupric oxide (CuO), Zn, zinc oxide (ZnO) or silver (Ag).
23. The method according to claim 1 wherein said polymeric composition is Nafion.
24. An electrode for CO2 reduction, comprising:
- a base or body of electrically conductive material; and
- a layer of a polymeric composition of a predetermined uniform thickness ranging from 1 μm to 100 μm on a surface of said base or body, wherein said polymeric composition consists essentially of Nafion polymer or an admixture of Nafion in combination with another polymer and/or a cocatalyst.
25. The electrode defined in claim 24 wherein the polymeric composition is Nafion polymer in the absence of an additional polymer or cocatalyst.
26. The electrode defined in claim 24 wherein the polymeric composition further includes polyvinylidene fluoride and mixtures thereof with Nafion polymer.
27. The electrode defined in claim 24 wherein said polymeric composition comprises at least one additional polymer selected from the group consisting of polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF), polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP), polyethyleneglycol (PEG), polyvinylalcohol (PVA), polyethyleneimine (PEI), polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) and mixtures thereof.
28. The electrode defined in claim 24 wherein the polymeric composition includes a fluoropolymer.
29. The electrode defined in claim 28 wherein the fluoropolymer is polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF, polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) or a mixture thereof.
30. The electrode defined in claim 27 wherein the at least one additional polymer is PVDF.
31. The electrode defined in claim 24 wherein the layer of the polymeric composition is Nafion having a thickness between approximately 2 μm and approximately 15 μm.
32. The electrode defined in claim 24 wherein the layer of the polymeric composition has a thickness effective to stabilize an intermediate in which CO is bound to the electrode coated with the layer of the polymeric composition.
33. The electrode defined in claim 24 wherein the layer of the polymeric composition has a thickness between approximately 20 μm and approximately 90 μm.
34. The electrode defined in claim 24, wherein the electrode is made of a material selected from the group consisting of carbon, copper, nickel and zinc and mixtures and alloys thereof.
35. The electrode defined in claim 24 24-33, wherein the electrode is made of a transition metal or transition metal alloy.
36. The electrode defined n claims 24 and 35 wherein the electrode is made of copper, zinc, silver, gold, cadmium, nickel, palladium, platinum or an alloy thereof.
37. The electrode according to claim 35 wherein the electrode is made of copper or a copper alloy.
38. The electrode defined in claim 37 wherein the copper alloy is brass (copper and zinc), bronze/phosphor bronze (copper and tin), naval brass (copper, zinc and tin), aluminum bronze (copper and aluminum), berylliumcopper (copper and beryllium), cupronickel (copper and nickel, and optionally iron and/or manganese), nickel silver (copper with nickel and zinc), copper silver (copper with silver) or copper gold (copper with gold).
39. The electrode defined in claim 38 wherein the copper alloy is brass.
40. The electrode defined in claim 24 wherein said polymeric composition further comprises a cocatalyst.
41. The electrode defined in claim 40 wherein said cocatalyst is in the form of a nanoparticle or a nanowire.
42. The electrode defined in claim 40 wherein said cocatalyst is made of copper (metallic), cuprous oxide (Cu2O), cupric oxide (CuO), Zn, zinc oxide (ZnO) or silver (Ag).
43. An electrolysis apparatus comprising: a housing defining a chamber; at least two electrodes disposed in part in said chamber and operatively connectable to a voltage source, said two electrodes including a working electrode; a first port member or fitting fixed to housing and communicating with said chamber for directing fluid into said chamber; and a second port member or fitting fixed to housing and communicating with said chamber for conveying fluid out of said chamber, said working electrode including an electrically conductive base member and a coating layer of a predetermined thickness of a polymeric composition disposed on said base member, wherein said polymeric composition comprises Nafion alone or in combination with an additional polymer and/or a cocatalyst.
44-61. (canceled)
Type: Application
Filed: Apr 21, 2021
Publication Date: Jun 15, 2023
Inventors: Hanqing Pan (Reno, NV), Christopher Jeffrey Barile (Reno, NV)
Application Number: 17/919,515