Electrochemical Reduction of CO2to Oxalic Acid

Experiments, Process Modeling, and Economics

Journal Article (2022)
Author(s)

Vera Boor (Student TU Delft)

Jeannine E.B.M. Frijns (Student TU Delft)

Antero T. Laitinen (VTT Technical Research Center of Finland)

Earl Goetheer (TNO)

Leo Van Den Broeke (TU Delft - Engineering Thermodynamics)

R. Kortlever (TU Delft - Large Scale Energy Storage)

W. de Jong (TU Delft - Large Scale Energy Storage)

O. Moultos (TU Delft - Engineering Thermodynamics)

T.J.H. Vlugt (TU Delft - Engineering Thermodynamics)

M. Ramdin (TU Delft - Engineering Thermodynamics)

More authors (External organisation)

Research Group
Energy Technology
Copyright
© 2022 Vera Boor, Jeannine E.B.M. Frijns, Antero T. Laitinen, Earl Goetheer, L.J.P. van den Broeke, R. Kortlever, W. de Jong, O. Moultos, T.J.H. Vlugt, M. Ramdin, More Authors
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.iecr.2c02647
More Info
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Publication Year
2022
Language
English
Copyright
© 2022 Vera Boor, Jeannine E.B.M. Frijns, Antero T. Laitinen, Earl Goetheer, L.J.P. van den Broeke, R. Kortlever, W. de Jong, O. Moultos, T.J.H. Vlugt, M. Ramdin, More Authors
Research Group
Energy Technology
Issue number
40
Volume number
61
Pages (from-to)
14837-14846
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Abstract

We performed H-cell and flow cell experiments to study the electrochemical reduction of CO2 to oxalic acid (OA) on a lead (Pb) cathode in various nonaqueous solvents. The effects of anolyte, catholyte, supporting electrolyte, temperature, water content, and cathode potential on the Faraday efficiency (FE), current density (CD), and product concentration were investigated. We show that a high FE for OA can be achieved (up to 90%) at a cathode potential of -2.5 V vs Ag/AgCl but at relatively low CDs (10-20 mA/cm2). The FE of OA decreases significantly with increasing water content of the catholyte, which causes byproduct formation (e.g., formate, glycolic acid, and glyoxylic acid). A process design and techno-economic evaluation of the electrochemical conversion of CO2 to OA is presented. The results show that the electrochemical route for OA production can compete with the fossil-fuel based route for the base case scenario (CD of 100 mA/cm2, OA FE of 80%, cell voltage of 4 V, electrolyzer CAPEX of $20000/m2, electricity price of $30/MWh, and OA price of $1000/ton). A sensitivity analysis shows that the market price of OA has a huge influence on the economics. A market price of at least $700/ton is required to have a positive net present value and a payback time of less than 10 years. The performance and economics of the process can be further improved by increasing the CD and FE of OA by using gas diffusion electrodes and eliminating water from the cathode, lowering the cell voltage by increasing the conductivity of the electrolyte solutions, and developing better OA separation methods.