Investigating Electrode Flooding in a Flowing Electrolyte, Gas-Fed Carbon Dioxide Electrolyzer

12 September 2019, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Managing the gas-liquid interface within gas diffusion electrodes (GDEs) is key to maintaining high product selectivities in carbon dioxide electroreduction. By screening silver-catalyzed GDEs over a range of applied current densities, we observe an inverse correlation between carbon monoxide selectivity and the electrochemical double-layer capacitance, a proxy for wetted electrode area. We find that plotting current-dependent performance as a function of cumulative charge leads to data collapse onto a single sigmoidal curve indicating that the passage of faradaic current accelerates flooding. We hypothesize that high cathode alkalinity, driven by both initial electrolyte conditions and cathode half-reactions, promotes carbonate formation and precipitation which, in turn, facilitates electrolyte permeation. This mechanism is reinforced by the observations that post-test GDEs retain less hydrophobicity than pristine materials and that water rinsing and drying electrodes temporarily recovers peak selectivity. This knowledge offers an opportunity to design electrodes with greater carbonation tolerance to improve device longevity.

Keywords

carbon dioxide reduction
electrochemistry
energy conversion
gas diffusion electrodes
wetting

Supplementary materials

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Title
Leonard et al GDE Flooding ChemRxiv SI
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