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Electrolyte Design Using “Porous Water” for High‐purity Carbon Monoxide Electrosynthesis from Dilute Carbon Dioxide

13

Citations

61

References

2025

Year

Abstract

Electrosynthesis of high-purity carbon monoxide (CO) from captured carbon dioxide (CO<sub>2</sub>) remains energy-intensive due to the unavoidable CO<sub>2</sub> regeneration and post-purification stages. Here, we propose a direct high-purity CO electrosynthesis strategy employing an innovative electrolyte, termed porous electrolyte (PE), based on "porous water". Zeolite nanocrystals within PE provide permanent pores in the liquid phase, enabling physical CO<sub>2</sub> adsorption through an intraparticle diffusion model, as demonstrated by molecular dynamics simulations and in situ spectral analysis. Captured CO<sub>2</sub> spontaneously desorbs under applied reductive potential, driven by the interfacial CO<sub>2</sub> concentration gradient, and is subsequently reduced electrochemically. The high CO<sub>2</sub> concentration in PE enhances mass transfer, and surface ion exchange between Si-OH groups and K<sup>+</sup> ions on the zeolite surface generates a stronger interfacial electric field, promoting electron transfer steps. This optimized kinetics for mass and electron transfer confers heightened intrinsic activity toward CO<sub>2</sub> electroreduction. The PE-based electrolysis system demonstrated superior CO Faradaic efficiency and partial current density compared to the conventional CO<sub>2</sub>-fed system. A circular system using PE and a Ni-N/C cathode realized continuous production of high-purity CO (97.0 wt %) from dilute CO<sub>2</sub> (15 %) and maintained >90.0 wt % under 150 mA cm<sup>-2</sup>, with significantly reduced energy consumption and costs.

References

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