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Local Chemical Environment Governs Anode Processes in CO<sub>2</sub> Electrolyzers

71

Citations

40

References

2021

Year

Abstract

A major goal within the CO<sub>2</sub> electrolysis community is to replace the generally used Ir anode catalyst with a more abundant material, which is stable and active for water oxidation under process conditions. Ni is widely applied in alkaline water electrolysis, and it has been considered as a potential anode catalyst in CO<sub>2</sub> electrolysis. Here we compare the operation of electrolyzer cells with Ir and Ni anodes and demonstrate that, while Ir is stable under process conditions, the degradation of Ni leads to a rapid cell failure. This is caused by two parallel mechanisms: (i) a pH decrease of the anolyte to a near neutral value and (ii) the local chemical environment developing at the anode (i.e., high carbonate concentration). The latter is detrimental for zero-gap electrolyzer cells only, but the first mechanism is universal, occurring in any kind of CO<sub>2</sub> electrolyzer after prolonged operation with recirculated anolyte.

References

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