Unraveling the electrolyte-free interface in membrane CO2 electrolysers

Abstract

Zero-gap membrane electrode assembly electrolysers represent the benchmark architecture for scalable CO2 electrolysis and beyond. However, their device-level performance, particularly regarding energy efficiency and long-term stability, remains inadequate for practical deployment. Here, we argue that a key constraint of membrane electrolysers lies in the absence of catholytes, which creates a local reaction environment fundamentally distinct from that of aqueous H-type or flow cell systems, thereby reshaping electrocatalytic behaviour at the device level. We highlight the profound impacts of this catholyte-free interface, including altered proton availability, carbonate issues, mass transport limitations, product crossover, and re-oxidation—each representing a forefront challenge for CO2 electrolysis. By examining these emerging interfacial phenomena, we propose key strategies for advancing membrane CO2 electrolysers, including membrane-anolyte integration, ionomer engineering, and in situ device diagnostics. Collectively, these insights aim to bridge the interfacial gap between traditional half-cell studies (catalyst–electrolyte interfaces) and modern full-cell devices (catalyst–membrane interfaces).

Graphical abstract: Unraveling the electrolyte-free interface in membrane CO2 electrolysers

Article information

Article type
Perspective
Submitted
02 May 2025
Accepted
20 Jun 2025
First published
07 Jul 2025

Energy Environ. Sci., 2025, Advance Article

Unraveling the electrolyte-free interface in membrane CO2 electrolysers

W. Ren, Y. Zheng and S. Qiao, Energy Environ. Sci., 2025, Advance Article , DOI: 10.1039/D5EE02408K

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