USTC Boosts Electrocatalytic CO2 Reduction with Enriched Reactants

Chinese Academy of Sciences

A research team led by Prof. GAO Minrui from the University of Science and Technology of China (USTC) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences published a review paper entitled "Enrichment of reactants and intermediates for electrocatalytic CO2 reduction" in Chemical Society Reviews.

The use of electrocatalytic carbon dioxide reduction for the production of high value-added multicarbon fuels (ethylene, ethanol, acetic acid, n-propanol) is hampered by low selectivity and conversion rates, and its performance has not yet met the requirements for industrial production. An important constraint to the development of this technology is the low solubility and diffusion coefficient of carbon dioxide in the aqueous phase, and the ease with which carbon dioxide reacts with hydroxide in aqueous solution to form carbonates. This results in low concentrations of carbon dioxide and intermediates near the catalytic site, severely limiting the conversion of carbon dioxide to multicarbon products.

Existing studies have shown that the enrichment of CO2 molecules and carbon-based intermediates in the vicinity of the catalytic site can increase the percentage of activated molecules per unit volume and enhance the effective collision between molecules, which can accelerate the reaction rate and improve the selectivity of the conversion of CO2 into multicarbon products.

The researchers systematically summarised the enrichment strategies in the CO2 reduction reaction in terms of the structure and properties of CO2 molecules, catalyst design, catalyst reconfiguration, local microenvironmental regulation, electrolyte regulation and electrolysis device optimisation, and analysed in-depth the mechanisms of reactants and intermediates enrichment in the different strategies from the macroscopic to the microscopic level. Finally, they made an outlook on the challenges of the enrichment effect in the promotion of CO2 reduction as well as the future development.

The publication of this review paper in Chemical Society Reviews reflects that the research of our research team in the field of electrocatalytic carbon dioxide reduction has become systematic and internationally influential.

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