(666f) Electrochemical CO Reduction to Acetate in Bioelectrolyte for Product Upgrading to Bioplastics
AIChE Annual Meeting
2024
2024 AIChE Annual Meeting
Catalysis and Reaction Engineering Division
Carbon Dioxide Upgrading IV: Engineering CO2 Reduction Catalysis
Thursday, October 31, 2024 - 2:00pm to 2:18pm
Electrochemical CO2/CO reduction typically stops at C2 to C3 products, and it is getting extremely challenging to obtain high-value hydrocarbons that are longer than C3. Integrating electrochemical CO2/CO electrolyzers with a downstream bioreactor could help to obtain high-value long-chain products, but the electrolytes are mismatched in these two systems, preventing a smooth integration. Here, we demonstrated a porous solid electrolyte (PSE) electrolyzer that produced highly selective and pure acetate (~55% of FEacetate with ~94 wt% of a relative purity) coupled with the biosynthesis system to generate C4+ polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB) bioplastic. A finely tuned electrolyte containing proper salt medium with acetate can be directly injected into the downstream bioreactor without any separation or salt mixing processes. In this optimized coupled platform, Ralstonia eutropha bacteria can grow with pure acetate generated from the electrocatalytic reactor using CO gas and produce bioplastic as the final value-added product. Using an optimized electrolyte, Ralstonia eutropha efficiently converted acetate to 510 mg/L of C4+ poly-hydroxybutyrate bioplastic, demonstrating carbon conversion efficiencies similar to bacteria cultivated on simulated mineral salt medium.