The effects of power ultrasound (24 kHz) on the electrochemical reduction of CO2 on polycrystalline copper electrodes

by Islam, Hujjatul Md; Mehrabi, Hamed; Coridan, Robert H.; Burheim, Odne S.; Hihn, Jean-Yves; Pollet, Bruno G.

The electrochemical CO2 reduction reaction (CO2RR) on polycrystalline copper (Cu) electrode was performed in a CO2-saturated 0.10 M Na2CO3 aqueous solution at 278 K in the absence and presence of low-frequency high-power ultrasound (f = 24 kHz, P-T similar to 1.23 kW/dm(3)) in a specially and well-characterized sonoelectrochemical reactor. It was found that in the presence of ultrasound, the cathodic current (I-c) for CO2 reduction increased significantly when compared to that in the absence of ultrasound (silent conditions). It was observed that ultrasound increased the faradaic efficiency of carbon monoxide (CO), methane (CH4) and ethylene (C2H4) formation and decreased the faradaic efficiency of molecular hydrogen (H-2). Under ultrasonication, a ca. 40% increase in faradaic efficiency was obtained for methane formation through the CO2RR. In addition, and interestingly, water-soluble CO2 reduction products such as formic acid and ethanol were found under ultrasonic conditions whereas under silent conditions, these expected electrochemical CO2RR products were absent. It was also found that power ultrasound increases the formation of smaller hydrocarbons through the CO2RR and may initiate new chemical reaction pathways through the sonolytic di-hydrogen splitting yielding other products, and simultaneously reducing the overall molecular hydrogen gas formation.

Journal
Ultrasonics Sonochemistry
Volume
72
Year
2021
URL
https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ultsonch.2020.105401
ISBN/ISSN
1873-2828; 1350-4177
DOI
10.1016/j.ultsonch.2020.105401