Low coordination number copper catalysts for electrochemical CO2 methanation in a membrane electrode assembly

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Abstract

The electrochemical conversion of CO2 to methane provides a means to store intermittent renewable electricity in the form of a carbon-neutral hydrocarbon fuel that benefits from an established global distribution network. The stability and selectivity of reported approaches reside below technoeconomic-related requirements. Membrane electrode assembly-based reactors offer a known path to stability; however, highly alkaline conditions on the cathode favour C-C coupling and multi-carbon products. In computational studies herein, we find that copper in a low coordination number favours methane even under highly alkaline conditions. Experimentally, we develop a carbon nanoparticle moderator strategy that confines a copper-complex catalyst when employed in a membrane electrode assembly. In-situ XAS measurements confirm that increased carbon nanoparticle loadings can reduce the metallic copper coordination number. At a copper coordination number of 4.2 we demonstrate a CO2-to-methane selectivity of 62%, a methane partial current density of 136 mA cm−2, and > 110 hours of stable operation.

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Xu, Y., Li, F., Xu, A., Edwards, J. P., Hung, S. F., Gabardo, C. M., … Sinton, D. (2021). Low coordination number copper catalysts for electrochemical CO2 methanation in a membrane electrode assembly. Nature Communications, 12(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-23065-4

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