Electrochemical Reduction of CO 2 in Tubular Flow Cells under Gas-Liquid Taylor Flow.
Isabell BagemihlChaitanya BhatrajuJ Ruud van OmmenVolkert van SteijnPublished in: ACS sustainable chemistry & engineering (2022)
Electrochemical reduction of CO 2 using renewable energy is a promising avenue for sustainable production of bulk chemicals. However, CO 2 electrolysis in aqueous systems is severely limited by mass transfer, leading to low reactor performance insufficient for industrial application. This paper shows that structured reactors operated under gas-liquid Taylor flow can overcome these limitations and significantly improve the reactor performance. This is achieved by reducing the boundary layer for mass transfer to the thin liquid film between the CO 2 bubbles and the electrode. This work aims to understand the relationship between process conditions, mass transfer, and reactor performance by developing an easy-to-use analytical model. We find that the film thickness and the volume ratio of CO 2 /electrolyte fed to the reactor significantly affect the current density and the faradaic efficiency. Additionally, we find industrially relevant performance when operating the reactor at an elevated pressure beyond 5 bar. We compare our predictions with numerical simulations based on the unit cell approach, showing good agreement for a large window of operating parameters, illustrating when the easy-to-use predictive expressions for the current density and faradaic efficiency can be applied.