Grainger College of Engineering Seminars & Speakers

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CHBE 565 Seminar, Prof. Carlos Morales-Guio, UCLA, "Towards Understanding the Role of Transport in Electrocatalysis: The Role of Dimensionless Analysis and Multi-scale Modeling" (host: Kenis)

Event Type
Seminar/Symposium
Sponsor
Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering and International Paper Company
Location
116 Roger Adams Laboratory
Date
Sep 28, 2023   2:00 pm  
Contact
Christine Bowser
E-Mail
cbowser@illinois.edu
Phone
217-244-9214
Views
78
Originating Calendar
Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering - Seminars and Events

Abstract A promising approach to store energy is the use of excess electricity to drive the production of fuels and chemicals in electrochemical reactors. The lack of understanding of the relation between transport phenomena (e.g. mass, heat, charge), intrinsic kinetics and electrocatalytic performance is currently limiting the scale-up of electrocatalytic technologies particularly for transformations where transport phenomena play a role in determining product selectivity and production rate. In this presentation, I will discuss our novel approach of combining reactors design, multi-scale modeling and dimensionless analysis to understand and decouple mass transfer effects and intrinsic electrode kinetics particularly for transformations that involve dissolved gas substrates (i.e. H2, O2, CO2, CO, CH4, N2) and diluted protons in near neutral pH.

In this talk, the development of a multi-scale first-principles reaction-transport model is presented for the electrochemical reduction of CO2 to fuels and chemicals on polycrystalline copper electrodes. The model utilizes a continuous stirred-tank reactor (CSTR)-volume approximation that captures the relative timescales for mesoscale stochastic processes at the electrode/electrolyte interface that determine product selectivity. The model is built starting from a large experimental dataset obtained under a broad range of well-defined transport regimes in a gastight rotating cylinder electrode cell. Product distributions under different conditions of transport, applied potential, bulk electrolyte concentration, and catalyst porosity are rationalized by introducing dimensionless numbers that reduce complexity and capture relative timescales for mesoscopic and microscopic dynamics of electrocatalytic reactions on copper electrodes of any porosity. This work demonstrates that one CO2 reduction mechanism can explain differences in selectivity reported for copper-based electrocatalysts when mass transport, concentration polarization effects, and primary and secondary current distributions are taken into account. The reaction-transport model presented here should enable the rational design of CO2 electrolyzers.

Biography Carlos Morales-Guio is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering at the University of California, Los Angeles. His research group is interested in electrochemical catalysis, particularly with respect to energy and chemical transformations for sustainable energy applications. Carlos received his B. Eng. degree in Chemical Engineering from Osaka University and his M.S. and Ph.D. in Chemistry and Chemical Engineering from the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne. Before joining UCLA in the fall of 2018, Carlos was a postdoctoral fellow at Stanford University. Carlos is a recipient of the Swiss National Science Foundation Postdoctoral Fellowship, the Asea Brown Boveri (ABB) Award 2017 and is a Scialog Fellow on Negative Emission Sciences.

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