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Electrochemical direct air capture of CO2 using neutral red as reversible redox-active material

Author(s)
Seo, Hyowon; Hatton, T Alan
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Abstract
Direct air capture of carbon dioxide is a viable option for the mitigation of CO2 emissions and their impact on global climate change. Conventional processes for carbon capture from ambient air require 230 to 800 kJ thermal per mole of CO2, which accounts for most of the total cost of capture. Here, we demonstrate electrochemical direct air capture using neutral red as a redox-active material in an aqueous solution enabled by the inclusion of nicotinamide as a hydrotropic solubilizing agent. The electrochemical system demonstrates a high electron utilization of 0.71 in a continuous flow cell with an estimated minimum work of 35 kJe per mole of CO2 from 15% CO2. Further exploration using ambient air (410 ppm CO2 in the presence of 20% oxygen) as a feed gas shows electron utilization of 0.38 in a continuous flow cell to provide an estimated minimum work of 65 kJe per mole of CO2.
Date issued
2023-01-19
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/162348
Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Chemical Engineering
Journal
Nature Communications
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Citation
Seo, H., Hatton, T.A. Electrochemical direct air capture of CO2 using neutral red as reversible redox-active material. Nat Commun 14, 313 (2023).
Version: Final published version

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