Scanning Electrochemical Flow Cell with Online Mass Spectroscopy for Accelerated Screening of Carbon Dioxide Reduction Electrocatalysts
Author(s) -
Yungchieh Lai,
Ryan J. R. Jones,
Yu Wang,
Lan Zhou,
John M. Gregoire
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
acs combinatorial science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.928
H-Index - 81
eISSN - 2156-8952
pISSN - 2156-8944
DOI - 10.1021/acscombsci.9b00130
Subject(s) - overpotential , electrocatalyst , chemistry , cyclic voltammetry , electrochemical reduction of carbon dioxide , catalysis , electrochemistry , chemical engineering , product distribution , carbon dioxide , electrolyte , inorganic chemistry , nanotechnology , electrode , materials science , organic chemistry , carbon monoxide , engineering
Electrochemical conversion of carbon dioxide into valuable chemicals or fuels is an increasingly important strategy for achieving carbon neutral technologies. The lack of a sufficiently active and selective electrocatalyst, particularly for synthesizing highly reduced products, motivates accelerated screening to evaluate new catalyst spaces. Traditional techniques, which couple electrocatalyst operation with analytical techniques to measure product distributions, enable screening throughput at 1-10 catalysts per day. In this paper, a combinatorial screening instrument is designed for MS detection of hydrogen, methane, and ethylene in quasi-real-time during catalyst operation experiments in an electrochemical flow cell. Coupled with experiment modeling, product detection during cyclic voltammetry (CV) enables modeling of the voltage-dependent partial current density for each detected product. We demonstrate the technique by using the well-established thin film Cu catalysts and by screening a Pd-Zn composition library in carbonate-buffered aqueous electrolyte. The rapid product distribution characterization over a large range of overpotential makes the instrument uniquely suited for accelerating screening of electrocatalysts for the carbon dioxide reduction reaction.
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