• Scientific Dissemination

List of Publications


  • 2023 +

    • How alkali cations affect salt precipitation and CO2 electrolysis performance in membrane electrode assembly electrolyzers?, S. Garg, Q. Xu, A. B. Moss, M. Mirolo, W. Deng, I. Chorkendorff, J. Drnec and B. Seger, Energy Environ. Sci., 2023, Advance Article
      DOI: 10.1039/D2EE03725D

      Abstract: Electrocatalytic CO2 reduction in membrane electrode assembly (MEA) electrolyzers is a promising approach to producing carbon-neutral chemicals and fuels at commercially relevant rates. However, short-duration stability owing to cathode flooding and salt precipitation in MEAs is a significant challenge for commercializing this technology. Using operando wide-angle X-ray scattering (WAXS), we demonstrate how the formation of salt precipitates occurs and varies with alkali cations. We also correlate this formation of precipitates with CO2 reduction reaction (CO2RR) and hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) selectivity by measuring the anode and cathode products using an in-line gas chromatograph. We found that low-solubility salts can quickly precipitate over the catalyst layer and limit the CO2 from accessing the catalyst thereby enhancing the HER. Although salts with marginal solubility demonstrate an oscillatory trend between salt precipitation and dissolution, the use of highly soluble Cs salts prevents salt precipitation and mitigates flooding of the gas diffusion layer. In addition, diluting cation concentration in the anolyte significantly decreases salt precipitation as well as improves the CO2RR product selectivity. This work suggests that the key to circumventing salt precipitation is to use highly soluble alkali cation salts as the anolyte (e.g. CsHCO3) along with an optimal salt concentration between 0.01 and 0.1 M.

    • Versatile high energy X-ray transparent electrolysis cell for operando measurements, A. B. Moss, J. Hätinenb, P. Kůš, S. Garg, M. Mirolo, I. Chorkendorff, B. Seger, J. Drnec, Journal of Power Sources, Volume 562, 1 April 2023.
      DOI: 10.1016/j.jpowsour.2023.232754 - ChemXiv https://doi.org/10.26434/chemrxiv-2022-7v75p-v2

      Abstract: TWe here present a design for a versatile electrochemical cell designed for X-ray operando studies of Membrane Electrode Assembly (MEA) based electrolysis. The cell has been tested for CO2 electrolysis performance and for various X-ray techniques.

    • Influence of Headgroups in Ethylene-Tetrafluoroethylene-Based Radiation-Grafted Anion Exchange Membranes for CO2 Electrolysis, Carlos A. Giron Rodriguez, Bjørt Óladottir Joensen, Asger Barkholt Moss, Gastón O. Larrazábal, Daniel K. Whelligan, Brian Seger, John R. Varcoe, and Terry R. Willson, ACS Sustainable Chem. Eng. 2023
      DOI: 10.1021/acssuschemeng.2c06205z - OPEN ACCESS

      Abstract: The performance of zero-gap CO2 electrolysis (CO2E) is significantly influenced by the membrane’s chemical structure and physical properties due to its effects on the local reaction environment and water/ion transport. Radiation-grafted anion-exchange membranes (RG-AEM) have demonstrated high ionic conductivity and durability, making them a promising alternative for CO2E. These membranes were fabricated using two different thicknesses of ethylene-tetrafluoroethylene polymer substrates (25 and 50 μm) and three different headgroup chemistries: benzyl-trimethylammonium, benzyl-N-methylpyrrolidinium, and benzyl-N-methylpiperidinium (MPIP). Our membrane characterization and testing in zero-gap cells over Ag electrocatalysts under commercially relevant conditions showed correlations between the water uptake, ionic conductivity, hydration, and cationic-head groups with the CO2E efficiency. The thinner 25 μm-based AEM with the MPIP-headgroup (ion-exchange capacities of 2.1 ± 0.1 mmol g–1) provided balanced in situ test characteristics with lower cell potentials, high CO selectivity, reduced liquid product crossover, and enhanced water management while maintaining stable operation compared to the commercial AEMs. The CO2 electrolyzer with an MPIP-AEM operated for over 200 h at 150 mA cm–2 with CO selectivities up to 80% and low cell potentials (around 3.1 V) while also demonstrating high conductivities and chemical stability during performance at elevated temperatures (above 60 °C).

    • Best practices for electrochemical reduction of carbon dioxide, Seger, B., Robert, M. & Jiao, Nat Sustain (2023)
      DOI: 10.1038/s41893-022-01034-z - OPEN ACCESS

      Abstract: Carbon capture, utilization and storage, a fundamental process to a sustainable future, relies on a suite of technologies among which electrochemical reduction of carbon dioxide is essential. Here, we discuss the issues faced when reporting performance of this technology and recommend how to move forward at both materials and device levels. Electrochemical reduction of CO2 into value-added chemicals has attracted considerable attention recently1–3. However, reporting the performance of a new CO2 electrocatalyst or a new reactor design is not trivial because of the complex nature of the CO2 electroreduction reaction. In many cases, the results are presented in a confusing manner, rendering it difficult to assess the true performance of the catalyst and/or device. In this Comment, we first discuss common problems in reporting the performance of a new electrocatalyst (including both heterogeneous and molecular catalysts) in the literature and then extend the discussion to how the products should be properly measured and quantified. Finally, we comment on the issues associated with full-cell level studies and recommend the best practices for electrochemical CO2 reduction.

     

  • 2022 +

    • How membrane characteristics influence the performance of CO2 and CO electrolysis, S. Garg, C. A. Giron Rodriguez, T. E. Rufford, J. R. Varcoe and B. Seger, Energy Environ. Sci., 2022, in press, Advance Article
      DOI: 10.1039/D2EE01818G - ChemrXiv

      Abstract: Due to the ability to produce sustainably carbon-based chemicals and fuels, CO2 electrolysis and the closely related CO electrolysis are advancing rapidly from fundamental studies toward industrial applications. Many near-room temperature CO2 and CO electrolysis (CO(2)E) technologies adopt features from proton exchange membrane fuel cells and H2 electrolyzers. However, CO(2)E's selectivity and overall performance are highly sensitive to a multitude of parameters, adding an extra degree of complexity. One often-overlooked parameter in optimizing these devices is the ion exchange membranes (IEM). Here we critically review the IEM performance variables of most relevance to CO(2)E, which leads to identifying several parameters in need of substantial more scientific understanding. We begin with a summary of the working principles of the three main IEM types for CO(2)E, then focus on anion exchange membranes (AEM) since AEMs provide the most favorable local alkaline environment for CO(2)E at the cathode. Critical issues for AEMs in CO2E include (i) ion and water transport in the membrane, (ii) ionic conductivity, and (iii) chemical stability. We conclude with an overview of the state-of-the-art IEM reported in high current density (j ≥ 100 mA cm−2) CO2 and CO electrolysis devices.

    • Limits to scaling relations between adsorption energies?, S. Vijay, G. Kastlunger, K. Chan, and J. K. Nørskov, J. Chem. Phys., 156, 231102 (2022)
      DOI: 10.1063/5.0096625 - ChemrXiv

      Abstract: Linear scaling relations have led to an understanding of trends in catalytic activity and selectivity of many reactions in heterogeneous and electro-catalysis. However, linear scaling between the chemisorption energies of any two small molecule adsorbates is not guaranteed. A prominent example is the lack of scaling between the chemisorption energies of carbon and oxygen on transition metal surfaces. In this work, we show that this lack of scaling originates from different re-normalized adsorbate valence energies of lower-lying oxygen vs higher-lying carbon. We develop a model for chemisorption of small molecule adsorbates within the d-band model by combining a modified form of the Newns–Anderson hybridization energy with an effective orthogonalization term. We develop a general descriptor to a priori determine if two adsorbates are likely to scale with each other.

    • Force-Based Method to Determine the Potential Dependence in Electrochemical Barriers, S. Vijay, G. Kastlunger, J. A. Gauthier, A. Patel, and K. Chan, J. Phys. Chem. Lett., 2022, 13, 5719−5725
      DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpclett.2c013672022 - ChemrXiv

      Abstract: Determining ab initio potential-dependent energetics is critical to the investigation of mechanisms for electrochemical reactions. While methodology for evaluating reaction thermodynamics is established, simulation techniques for the corresponding kinetics is still a major challenge owing to a lack of potential control, finite cell size effects, or computational expense. In this work, we develop a model that allows for computing electrochemical activation energies from just a handful of density functional theory (DFT) calculations. The sole input into the model are the atom-centered forces obtained from DFT calculations performed on a homogeneous grid composed of varying field strengths. We show that the activation energies as a function of the potential obtained from our model are consistent for different supercell sizes and proton concentrations for a range of electrochemical reactions.

    • 2022 Roadmap on Low Temperature Electrochemical CO2 Reduction, Ifan E. L. Stephens et al, 2022J. Phys. Energy , in press
      DOI (OPEN ACCESS): 10.1088/2515-7655/ac7823 

      Abstract: sustainable production of valuable chemicals and fuels. In this roadmap, we review recent progress in fundamental understanding, catalyst development, and in engineering and scale-up. We discuss the outstanding challenges towards commercialization of electrochemical CO2 reduction technology: energy efficiencies, selectivities, low current densities, and stability. We highlight the opportunities in establishing rigorous standards for benchmarking performance, advances in in operando characterization, the discovery of new materials towards high value products, the investigation of phenomena across multiple-length scales and the application of data science towards doing so. We hope that this collective perspective sparks new research activities that ultimately bring us a step closer towards establishing a low- or zero-emission carbon cycle.

    • Covalent Organic Framework (COF) derived Ni-N-C Catalysts for Electrochemical CO2 Reduction: unraveling fundamental kinetic and structural parameters of the active sites, C. Li, W. Ju, S. Vijay, J. Timoshenko, K. Mou, D. A. Cullen, J. Yang, X. Wang, P. Pachfule, S. Brückner, H. Sang Jeon, F. T. Haase, S.-C. Tsang, C. Rettenmaier, K. Chan, B. Roldan Cuenya, A. Thomas, P. Strasser, Angew. Chem. Int. Ed, 2022, Accepted Author Manuscript
      DOI (OPEN ACCESS): 10.1002/anie.202114707

      Abstract: Electrochemical CO2 reduction is a potential approach to convert CO2 into valuable chemicals using electricity as feedstock. Abundant and affordable catalyst materials are needed to upscale this process in a sustainable manner. Nickel-nitrogen-doped carbon (Ni-N-C) is an efficient catalyst for CO2 electro-reduction to CO, and the single-site Ni-N x motif is believed as the active site. However, critical metrics for its catalytic activity, such as active site density and intrinsic turnover frequency, so far lack systematic discussion. In this work, we prepared a set of covalent organic framework (COF)-derived Ni-N-C catalysts, for which the Ni-N x content could be adjusted by the pyrolysis temperature. The combination of high-angle annular dark-field scanning transmission electron microscopy and extended X-ray absorption fine structure evidenced the presence of Ni single-sites, and quantitative X-ray photoemission addressed the relation between active site density and turnover frequency.

  • 2021 +

    • Unified mechanistic understanding of CO2 reduction to CO on transition metal and single atom catalysts, S. Vijay, W. Ju, S. Brückner, S.-C. Tsang, P. Strasser & K. Chan, Nature Catalysis 4, 1024–1031 (2021) 
      DOI: 10.1038/s41929-021-00705-y

      Abstract: CO is the simplest product from CO2 electroreduction (CO2R), but the identity and nature of its rate-limiting step remain controversial. Here we investigate the activity of transition metals (TMs), metal–nitrogen-doped carbon catalysts (MNCs) and a supported phthalocyanine, and present a unified mechanistic picture of the CO2R to CO for these catalysts. Applying the Newns–Andersen model, we find that on MNCs, like TMs, electron transfer to CO2 is facile. We find CO2* adsorption to generally be limiting on TMs, whereas MNCs can be limited by either CO2* adsorption or by the proton–electron transfer reaction to form COOH*. We evaluate these computed mechanisms against pH-dependent experimental activity measurements on the CO2R to CO activity. We present a unified activity volcano that includes the decisive CO2* and COOH* binding strengths. We show that the increased activity of MNC catalysts is due to the stabilization of larger adsorbate dipoles, which results from their discrete and narrow d states.

    • Cation-driven increases of CO2 utilization in a bipolar membrane electrode assembly for CO2 electrolysisK. Yang, M. Li, S. Subramanian, M. A. Blommaert, W. A. Smitha, T. Burdyny, ACS Energy Lett. 2021, 6, 12, 4291–4298
      DOI (OPEN ACCESS): 10.1021/acsenergylett.1c02058

      Abstract: Advancing reaction rates for electrochemical CO2 reduction in membrane electrode assemblies (MEAs) have boosted the promise of the technology while exposing new shortcomings. Among these is the maximum utilization of CO2, which is capped at 50% (CO as targeted product) due to unwanted homogeneous reactions. Using bipolar membranes in an MEA (BPMEA) has the capability of preventing parasitic CO2 losses, but their promise is dampened by poor CO2 activity and selectivity. In this work, we enable a 3-fold increase in the CO2 reduction selectivity of a BPMEA system by promoting alkali cation (K+) concentrations on the catalyst’s surface, achieving a CO Faradaic efficiency of 68%. When compared to an anion exchange membrane, the cation-infused bipolar membrane (BPM) system shows a 5-fold reduction in CO2 loss at similar current densities, while breaking the 50% CO2 utilization mark. The work provides a combined cation and BPM strategy for overcoming CO2 utilization issues in CO2 electrolyzers.

    • How to extract adsorption energies, adsorbate-adsorbate interaction parameters, and saturation coverages from temperature programmed desorption experimentsS. Vijay, H. H. Kristoffersen, Y. Katayama, Y. Shao Horn, I. Chorkendorff, B. Seger, K. Chan, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2021,23, 24396-24402
      DOI: 10.1039/D1CP01992A - ChemRxiv: https://chemrxiv.org/

      Abstract: We present a scheme to extract the adsorption energy, adsorbate interaction parameter and the saturation coverage from temperature programmed desorption (TPD) experiments. We propose that the coverage dependent adsorption energy can be fit using a functional form including the configurational entropy and linear adsorbate–adsorbate interaction terms. As one example of this scheme, we analyze TPD of CO desorption on Au(211) and Au(310) surfaces. We determine that under atmospheric CO pressure, the steps of both facets adsorb between 0.4–0.9 ML coverage of CO*. We compare this result against energies obtained from five density functionals, RPBE, PBE, PBE-D3, RPBE-D3 and BEEF-vdW. We find that the energies and equilibrium coverages from RPBE-D3 and PBE are closest to the values determined from the TPD.
       scheme

    • Interaction of CO with Gold in an Electrochemical EnvironmentS. Vijay, T. V. Hogg, J. Ehlers, H. H. Kristoffersen, Y. Katayama, Y. Shao Horn, I. Chorkendorff, K. Chan, B. Seger, J. Phys. Chem. C 2021, 125, 32, 17684–17689
      DOI (OPEN ACCESS): 10.1021/acs.jpcc.1c04013

      Abstract: We present a joint theoretical–experimental study of CO coverage and facet selectivity on Au under electrochemical conditions. With in situ attenuated total reflection surface-enhanced IR spectroscopy, we investigate the CO binding in an electrochemical environment. At 0.2 V versus SHE, we detect a CO band that disappears upon facet-selective partial Pb underpotential deposition (UPD), suggesting that Pb blocks certain CO adsorption sites. With Pb UPD on single crystals and theoretical surface Pourbaix analysis, we eliminate (111) terraces as a possible adsorption site of CO. Ab initio molecular dynamics simulations of explicit water on the Au surface show the adsorption of CO on (211) steps to be significantly weakened relative to the (100) terrace due to competitive water adsorption. This result suggests that CO is more likely to bind to the (100) terrace than (211) steps in an electrochemical environment, even though Au steps under gas-phase conditions bind CO* more strongly. The competition between water and CO adsorption can result in different binding sites for CO* on Au in the gas phase and electrochemical environments.

    • A comprehensive approach to investigate CO2 reduction electrocatalysts at high current densities designsMing Ma, Gastón O. Larrazábal, Ming Ma, Brian Seger, Acc. Mater. Res. 2021, 2, 4, 220–229
      DOI (OPEN ACCESS): 10.1021/accountsmr.1c00004

      Abstract: As electrochemical CO2 reduction studies progress from beaker or H-cell devices operating at low current densities to gas diffusion electrode (GDE)-based devices that sustain high reaction rates and provide an avenue toward commercialization, the overall system becomes significantly more complex. While the current densities may vary for the different approaches, it is essential to maintain the same scientific rigor when analyzing these systems. The mass transfer optimizations used in GDE based approaches necessarily add complexity and provide new challenges that need to be analyzed and overcome in terms of both engineering as well as analysis techniques. This Account puts into perspective our recent works analyzing high current density CO2 electrolysis performance via a comprehensive investigation of the entire system.
      In particular, we show the importance of monitoring (i) the gas flow rates at the outlet of the cathodic compartment, (ii) the anodic gas composition for CO2/O2 ratio, and (iii) pH variations in the electrolyte. A rigorous analysis of these parameters allows us to achieve a complete carbon balance, in addition to accounting for a total of 100% Faradaic efficiency. By analyzing both the cathode outlet and anodic CO2:O2 ratio, we demonstrate that these methods can be used to self-validate results providing robustness. We show that this analysis approach holds for both a zero-gap membrane electrode assembly device and a flowing-catholyte device. In addition, a comprehensive monitoring approach reveals that having an alkaline environment in the vicinity of the cathode can absorb substantial amounts of CO2, which may greatly distort Faradaic efficiencies if not accounted for. While monitoring the outlet flow rate of a reactor appears a simple task, the mixed gases and small flow rates in lab-scale reactors can add challenges and we discuss various methods to measure these flow rates.
      While pH is well-known to play a role in the activity and selectivity of CO2 reduction, we demonstrate that (i) the operational pH is not necessarily the pH of the initial electrolyte, (ii) there are long transients in pH before steady state is reached (on the order of hours), and (iii) the pH of the anolyte and catholyte can be significantly different over the duration of the electrolysis.
      By varying the membrane type in a flowing-catholyte reactor (anion exchange, cation exchange, or bipolar membrane), we can use this monitoring approach to quantitatively identify the major differences in CO2 reduction performance related to these distinct membrane types. The overall conclusion is that complex engineering processes entail that a thorough monitoring of parameters is necessary to accurately analyze the performance of high current density electrochemical CO2 reduction devices.

  • 2020 +

    • Role of ion-selective membranes in the carbon balance for CO2 electroreduction via gas diffusion electrode reactor designs, Ming Ma, Sangkuk Kim, Ib Chorkendorff and Brian Seger, Chem. Sci., 2020, 11, 8854
      DOI (OPEN ACCESS): 10.1039/D0SC03047C - DTU Orbit repository: orbit.dtu.dk/en/publications

      Abstract: In this work, the effect of ion-selective membranes on the detailed carbon balance was systematically analyzed for high-rate CO2 reduction in GDE-type flow electrolyzers. By using different ion-selective membranes, we show nearly identical catalytic selectivity for CO2 reduction, which is primarily due to a similar local reaction environment created at the cathode/electrolyte interface via the introduction of a catholyte layer. In addition, based on a systematic exploration of gases released from electrolytes and the dynamic change of electrolyte speciation, we demonstrate the explicit discrepancy in carbon balance paths for the captured CO2 at the cathode/catholyte interface via reaction with OH when using different ion-selective membranes: (i) the captured CO2 could be transported through an anion exchange membrane in the form of CO32-, subsequently releasing CO2 along with O2 in the anolyte, and (ii) with a cation exchange membrane, the captured CO2 would be accumulated in the catholyte in the form of CO32-, while (iii) with the use of a bipolar membrane, the captured CO2 could be released at the catholyte/membrane interface in the form of gaseous CO2. The unique carbon balance path for each type of membrane is linked to ion species transported through the membranes.

    • Highly selective and scalable CO2 to CO - Electrolysis using coral-nanostructured Ag catalysts in zero-gap configuration, Woong Hee Lee, Young-Jin Ko, Yongjun Choi, Si Young Lee, Chang Hyuck Choi, Yun Jeong Hwang, Byoung Koun Min, Peter Strasser, Hyung-Suk Oh, Nano Energy, Volume 76, October 2020, 105030
      DOI: 10.1016/j.nanoen.2020.105030 

      Abstract: The direct electroreduction of CO2 to pure CO streams has attracted much attention for both academic research and industrial polymer synthesis development. Here, we explore catalytically very active, coral-structured Ag catalyst for the generation of pure CO from CO2-feeds in lab-bench scale zero-gap CO2 electrolyzer. Coral-shaped Ag electrodes achieved CO partial current densities of up to 312 mA cm−2, EECO of 38%, and FECO clearly above 90%. In-situ/operando X-ray Absorption Spectroscopy revealed the sustained presence of Ag+ subsurface species, whose local electronic field effects constitute likely molecular origins of the favorable experimental kinetics and selectivity. In addition, we show how electrode flooding in zero-gap CO2 electrolyzer compromises efficient CO2 mass transfer. Our studies highlight the need for a concomitant consideration of factors related to intrinsic catalytic activity of the active phase, its porous structure and its hydrophilicity/phobicity to achieve a sustained high product yield in AEM zero-gap electrolyzer.

We use cookies on our website. Some of them are essential for the operation of the site, while others help us to improve this site and the user experience (tracking cookies). You can decide for yourself whether you want to allow cookies or not. Please note that if you reject them, you may not be able to use all the functionalities of the site.