Abstract

Electroreduction allows for the transformation of a chemically inert molecule such as CO2 into a wide variety of useful carbon products. Unlike other approaches operating at higher temperatures, electrochemical reduction holds great promise since it achieves reduction under ambient conditions, thereby providing more control over the reaction selectivity. By controlling basic parameters such as the potential and the composition of the electrode, CO2 can be transformed into a variety of products including carbon monoxide, syngas (CO/H2), methane, and methanol. This reduction process takes place without external hydrogen, since water can be used as a source of both electrons and protons. Furthermore, this technology, when combined with renewable wind- or solar-derived electricity, has the potential to serve as a storage system for excess electricity. Despite these advantages, a number of challenges need to be overcome before reaching commercialization. New (and cheaper) electrocatalyst formulations with high faradaic selectivities are required. Impressive progress has been made on carbon-doped materials, which, in certain cases, have outperformed expensive noble metal-based materials. Research is also needed on new electrochemical reactor configurations able to overcome kinetic/mass transport limitations, which are crucial to reduce overpotentials. Fine control over the nature of the active sites and the reaction conditions is important to avoid parasitic reactions such as the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER), and therefore increases the faradaic efficiency towards the desired products.

Highlights

  • Fossil fuels provide most of the energy consumed worldwide and serve as a carbon source for preparing the fuels, chemicals, and multitude of carbon-based materials we use on a daily basis

  • Since CO2 is the final product of the combustion of fossil fuels, its capture and subsequent conversion into useful products have become an area of interest for researchers worldwide [1,2]

  • Biological and photocatalytic routes operate at much milder conditions, but they suffer from sluggish reaction kinetics and efficiencies

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Summary

Introduction

Fossil fuels provide most of the energy consumed worldwide and serve as a carbon source for preparing the fuels, chemicals, and multitude of carbon-based materials we use on a daily basis. The reduction process requires large amounts of external (and typically fossil-fuel derived) hydrogen.

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