posted on 2023-01-20, 21:13authored byBenjamin
C. Kash, Reginaldo J. Gomes, Chibueze V. Amanchukwu
CO2 electrochemical reduction (CO2R) in aprotic
media is a promising alternative to aqueous electrocatalysis, as it
minimizes the competing hydrogen evolution reaction while enhancing
CO2 solubility. To date, state-of-the-art alkali salts
used as electrolytes for selective aqueous CO2R are inaccessible
in aprotic systems due to the inactivation of the electrode surface
from carbonate deposition. In this work, we demonstrate that an acidic
nonaqueous environment enables sustained CO2 electrochemical
reduction with common alkali salts in dimethyl sulfoxide. Electrochemical
and spectroscopic techniques show that at low pH carbonate buildup
can be prevented, allowing CO2R to proceed. Product distribution
with a copper electrode revealed up to 80% Faradaic efficiency for
CO2R products, including carbon monoxide, formic acid,
and methane. By understanding the mechanism for electrode inactivation
in an aprotic medium and addressing that challenge with dilute acid
addition, we pave the way toward the development of more efficient
and selective electrolytes for CO2R.