Issue 35, 2021

Solar-assisted co-electrolysis of glycerol and water for concurrent production of formic acid and hydrogen

Abstract

Renewable electricity-driven water splitting provides a pathway to manufacturing hydrogen as a promising alternative to fossil fuels. A typical water electrolysis device is comprised of a cathodic hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) and an anodic oxygen evolution reaction (OER). Unfortunately, the OER consumes most of the overall electricity supply while generating negligible economic value, which inhibits the large-scale deployment of the water electrolysis technology. Here, we explored alternatives to the OER and demonstrated that electrooxidation of glycerol (a cheap byproduct of biodiesel and soap production) could lower anodic electricity consumption by up to 0.27 V while producing high-value formic acid with 96.2% faradaic efficiency (FE). Further, glycerol electrooxidation was combined with the photoelectrochemical HER to diminish the electricity requirement to 1.15 V, reducing the electricity consumption by ∼30% relative to typical water electrolysis. This study suggests that solar-assisted co-electrolysis of high-volume block chemicals and water may be an energy efficient and economically viable strategy to realize the sustainable production of value-added chemicals and hydrogen energy.

Graphical abstract: Solar-assisted co-electrolysis of glycerol and water for concurrent production of formic acid and hydrogen

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
30 Mar 2021
Accepted
29 Jun 2021
First published
30 Jun 2021

J. Mater. Chem. A, 2021,9, 19975-19983

Author version available

Solar-assisted co-electrolysis of glycerol and water for concurrent production of formic acid and hydrogen

Z. Ke, N. Williams, X. Yan, S. Younan, D. He, X. Song, X. Pan, X. Xiao and J. Gu, J. Mater. Chem. A, 2021, 9, 19975 DOI: 10.1039/D1TA02654B

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