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Orientation of a bipolar membrane determines the dominant ion and carbonic species transport in membrane electrode assemblies for CO(2) reduction

A bipolar membrane (BPM), consisting of a cation and an anion exchange layer (CEL and AEL), can be used in an electrochemical cell in two orientations: reverse bias and forward bias. A reverse bias is traditionally used to facilitate water dissociation and control the pH at either side. A forward bi...

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Autores principales: Blommaert, Marijn A., Sharifian, Rezvan, Shah, Namrata U., Nesbitt, Nathan T., Smith, Wilson A., Vermaas, David A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8112234/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34094566
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d0ta12398f
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author Blommaert, Marijn A.
Sharifian, Rezvan
Shah, Namrata U.
Nesbitt, Nathan T.
Smith, Wilson A.
Vermaas, David A.
author_facet Blommaert, Marijn A.
Sharifian, Rezvan
Shah, Namrata U.
Nesbitt, Nathan T.
Smith, Wilson A.
Vermaas, David A.
author_sort Blommaert, Marijn A.
collection PubMed
description A bipolar membrane (BPM), consisting of a cation and an anion exchange layer (CEL and AEL), can be used in an electrochemical cell in two orientations: reverse bias and forward bias. A reverse bias is traditionally used to facilitate water dissociation and control the pH at either side. A forward bias has been proposed for several applications, but insight into the ion transport mechanism is lacking. At the same time, when implementing a BPM in a membrane electrode assembly (MEA) for CO(2) reduction, the BPM orientation determines the environment of the CO(2) reduction catalyst, the anolyte interaction and the direction of the electric field at the interface layer. In order to understand the transport mechanisms of ions and carbonic species within a bipolar membrane electrode assembly (BPMEA), these two orientations were compared by performing CO(2) reduction. Here, we present a novel BPMEA using a Ag catalyst layer directly deposited on the membrane layer at the vapour–liquid interface. In the case of reverse bias, the main ion transport mechanism is water dissociation. CO(2) can easily crossover through the CEL as neutral carbonic acid due to the low pH in the reverse bias. Once it enters the AEL, it will be transported to the anolyte as (bi)carbonate because of the presence of hydroxide ions. When the BPM is in the forward bias mode, with the AEL facing the cathode, no net water dissociation occurs. This not only leads to a 3 V lower cathodic potential but also reduces the flux of carbonic species through the BPM. As the pH in the AEL is higher, (bi)carbonate is transported towards the CEL, which then blocks the majority of those species. However, this forward bias mode showed a lower selectivity towards CO production and a higher salt concentration was observed at the cathode surface. The high overpotential and CO(2) crossover in reverse bias can be mitigated via engineering BPMs, providing higher potential for future application than that of a BPM in forward bias owing to the intrinsic disadvantages of salt recombination and poor faradaic efficiency for CO(2) reduction.
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spelling pubmed-81122342021-06-02 Orientation of a bipolar membrane determines the dominant ion and carbonic species transport in membrane electrode assemblies for CO(2) reduction Blommaert, Marijn A. Sharifian, Rezvan Shah, Namrata U. Nesbitt, Nathan T. Smith, Wilson A. Vermaas, David A. J Mater Chem A Mater Chemistry A bipolar membrane (BPM), consisting of a cation and an anion exchange layer (CEL and AEL), can be used in an electrochemical cell in two orientations: reverse bias and forward bias. A reverse bias is traditionally used to facilitate water dissociation and control the pH at either side. A forward bias has been proposed for several applications, but insight into the ion transport mechanism is lacking. At the same time, when implementing a BPM in a membrane electrode assembly (MEA) for CO(2) reduction, the BPM orientation determines the environment of the CO(2) reduction catalyst, the anolyte interaction and the direction of the electric field at the interface layer. In order to understand the transport mechanisms of ions and carbonic species within a bipolar membrane electrode assembly (BPMEA), these two orientations were compared by performing CO(2) reduction. Here, we present a novel BPMEA using a Ag catalyst layer directly deposited on the membrane layer at the vapour–liquid interface. In the case of reverse bias, the main ion transport mechanism is water dissociation. CO(2) can easily crossover through the CEL as neutral carbonic acid due to the low pH in the reverse bias. Once it enters the AEL, it will be transported to the anolyte as (bi)carbonate because of the presence of hydroxide ions. When the BPM is in the forward bias mode, with the AEL facing the cathode, no net water dissociation occurs. This not only leads to a 3 V lower cathodic potential but also reduces the flux of carbonic species through the BPM. As the pH in the AEL is higher, (bi)carbonate is transported towards the CEL, which then blocks the majority of those species. However, this forward bias mode showed a lower selectivity towards CO production and a higher salt concentration was observed at the cathode surface. The high overpotential and CO(2) crossover in reverse bias can be mitigated via engineering BPMs, providing higher potential for future application than that of a BPM in forward bias owing to the intrinsic disadvantages of salt recombination and poor faradaic efficiency for CO(2) reduction. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2021-03-11 /pmc/articles/PMC8112234/ /pubmed/34094566 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d0ta12398f Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Blommaert, Marijn A.
Sharifian, Rezvan
Shah, Namrata U.
Nesbitt, Nathan T.
Smith, Wilson A.
Vermaas, David A.
Orientation of a bipolar membrane determines the dominant ion and carbonic species transport in membrane electrode assemblies for CO(2) reduction
title Orientation of a bipolar membrane determines the dominant ion and carbonic species transport in membrane electrode assemblies for CO(2) reduction
title_full Orientation of a bipolar membrane determines the dominant ion and carbonic species transport in membrane electrode assemblies for CO(2) reduction
title_fullStr Orientation of a bipolar membrane determines the dominant ion and carbonic species transport in membrane electrode assemblies for CO(2) reduction
title_full_unstemmed Orientation of a bipolar membrane determines the dominant ion and carbonic species transport in membrane electrode assemblies for CO(2) reduction
title_short Orientation of a bipolar membrane determines the dominant ion and carbonic species transport in membrane electrode assemblies for CO(2) reduction
title_sort orientation of a bipolar membrane determines the dominant ion and carbonic species transport in membrane electrode assemblies for co(2) reduction
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8112234/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34094566
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d0ta12398f
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