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1.
Small ; : e2310427, 2024 Feb 22.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38386289

RESUMEN

The use of gas diffusion electrodes (GDEs) enables efficient electrochemical CO2 reduction and may be a viable technology in CO2 utilization after carbon capture. Understanding the spatio-temporal phenomena at the triple-phase boundary formed inside GDEs remains a challenge; yet it is critical to design and optimize industrial electrodes for gas-fed electrolyzers. Thus far, transport and reaction phenomena are not yet fully understood at the microscale, among other factors, due to a lack of experimental analysis methods for porous electrodes under operating conditions. In this work, a realistic microfluidic GDE surrogate is presented. Combined with fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (FLIM), the methodology allows monitoring of wetting and local pH, representing the dynamic (in)stability of the triple phase boundary in operando. Upon charging the electrode, immediate wetting leads to an initial flooding of the catalyst layer, followed by spatially oscillating pH changes. The micromodel presented gives an experimental insight into transport phenomena within porous electrodes, which is so far difficult to achieve. The methodology and proof of the spatio-temporal pH and wetting oscillations open new opportunities to further comprehend the relationship between gas diffusion electrode properties and electrical currents originating at a given surface potential.

2.
Small ; 18(49): e2204012, 2022 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36253147

RESUMEN

Utilizing carbon dioxide (CO2 ) as a resource for carbon monoxide (CO) production using renewable energy requires electrochemical reactors with gas diffusion electrodes that maintain a stable and highly reactive gas/liquid/solid interface. Very little is known about the reasons why gas diffusion electrodes suffer from unstable long-term operation. Often, this is associated with flooding of the gas diffusion electrode (GDE) within a few hours of operation. A better understanding of parameters influencing the phase behavior at the electrolyte/electrode/gas interface is necessary to increase the durability of GDEs. In this work, a microfluidic structure with multi-scale porosity featuring heterogeneous surface wettability to realistically represent the behavior of conventional GDEs is presented. A gas/liquid/solid phase boundary was established within a conductive, highly porous structure comprising a silver catalyst and Nafion binder. Inoperando visualization of wetting phenomena was performed using confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM). Non-reversible wetting, wetting of hierarchically porous structures and electrowetting were observed and analyzed. Fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (FLIM) enabled the observation of reactions on the model electrode surface. The presented methodology enables the systematic evaluation of spatio-temporally evolving wetting phenomena as well as species characterization for novel catalyst materials under realistic GDE configurations and process parameters.

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