2024 AIChE Annual Meeting
(307e) Insights from the Systems Scale to Design Practical CO2 Electrolyzers
Authors
Our work has shown the tradeoff between single-pass conversion and selectivity for CO2 electrolyzers, a limitation that arises directly from current reactor design. Selectivity hugely impacts costs because low selectivity wastes electrolyzer energy on making hydrogen. Due to selectivity loss, we show that increasing single-pass conversion beyond ~10% increases process cost. The relationship between selectivity and single-pass conversion arises directly from the plug-flow channel design. Therefore, we call on the field to investigate reactor designs that modify this crucial handle on CO2R cost. Mitigating carbonate crossover, an effort within the field, leads to relatively small improvements in cost. Moreover, current density >1 A/cm2 has been repeatedly proposed as a target. However, we show that a tradeoff arises between capex and utility cost. At current electricity prices, the optimal total current density is <300 mA/cm2. High operating currents will worsen process costs, unless accompanied by much lower electricity costs.