Issue 17, 2021

The life-cycle environmental performance of producing formate via electrochemical reduction of CO2 in ionic liquid

Abstract

Carbon capture and utilisation provide a means to mitigate climate change caused by anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions by delaying carbon emissions via temporary storage in goods. This article presents a comprehensive Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) study of a novel process that generates formate via electrochemical reduction of CO2 in ionic liquid. We performed a scenario analysis, covering uncertain parameters like the recycling rate of unreacted reagents and the market price of CO2, and compared the environmental performance of the carbon utilisation system with that of the conventional process, which relies on fossil sources. Inventory data is obtained from a mix of literature sources and commercial LCA databases. Our analysis indicates that (i) the system needs to attain a 99.9% recycling rate to be competitive with the conventional process; (ii) a future negative market price of CO2 would substantially reduce the environmental impacts associated with formate; (iii) there are significant environmental trade-offs between the carbon utilisation system and the conventional process, with the former outperforming the latter in 6/8 out of the 14 impact categories investigated. It should be noted that our results are conservative because inventory data for the electrochemical reduction process is obtained from laboratory experiments.

Graphical abstract: The life-cycle environmental performance of producing formate via electrochemical reduction of CO2 in ionic liquid

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
29 Jun 2021
Accepted
09 Aug 2021
First published
10 Aug 2021
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Green Chem., 2021,23, 6639-6651

The life-cycle environmental performance of producing formate via electrochemical reduction of CO2 in ionic liquid

A. Paulillo, M. Pucciarelli, F. Grimaldi and P. Lettieri, Green Chem., 2021, 23, 6639 DOI: 10.1039/D1GC02306C

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