Tandem Acidic CO 2 Electrolysis Coupled with Syngas Fermentation: A Two-Stage Process for Producing Medium-Chain Fatty Acids.
Ying PuYue WangGaoying WuXiaobing WuYilin LuYangyang YuNa ChuXiaohong HeDaping LiRaymond Jianxiong ZengYong JiangPublished in: Environmental science & technology (2024)
The tandem application of CO 2 electrolysis with syngas fermentation holds promise for achieving heightened production rates and improved product quality. However, the significant impact of syngas composition on mixed culture-based microbial chain elongation remains unclear. Additionally, effective methods for generating syngas with an adjustable composition from acidic CO 2 electrolysis are currently lacking. This study successfully demonstrated the production of medium-chain fatty acids from CO 2 through tandem acidic electrolysis with syngas fermentation. CO could serve as the sole energy source or as the electron donor (when cofed with acetate) for caproate generation. Furthermore, the results of gas diffusion electrode structure engineering highlighted that the use of carbon black, either alone or in combination with graphite, enabled consistent syngas generation with an adjustable composition from acidic CO 2 electrolysis (pH 1). The carbon black layer significantly improved the CO selectivity, increasing from 0% to 43.5% (0.05 M K + ) and further to 92.4% (0.5 M K + ). This enhancement in performance was attributed to the promotion of K + accumulation, stabilizing catalytically active sites, rather than creating a localized alkaline environment for CO 2 -to-CO conversion. This research contributes to the advancement of hybrid technology for sustainable CO 2 reduction and chemical production.