Efficient Catalyst for the Electrochemical Reduction of Carbon Dioxide

Tulane researchers have developed a novel trimetallic catalyst (YPdCu) that electrochemically converts carbon dioxide into valuable ethanol and other byproducts. Laboratory testing demonstrates superior current density and ethanol conversion performance compared to existing methods, offering a promising solution for carbon capture while generating commercially valuable products.

CO2 Molecule

The Problem

Carbon dioxide accounts for 79% of US greenhouse gas emissions, with human activities adding CO2 faster than natural systems can absorb it. While reducing fossil fuel consumption is ideal, current efforts are insufficient to prevent harmful environmental effects. New technologies are urgently needed to capture and convert excess atmospheric CO2 into useful products.

The Solution

This trimetallic YPdCu catalyst combines yttrium and palladium doped into copper to efficiently convert CO2 into ethanol through electrochemical reduction. Proof-of-concept laboratory experiments show improved current density and ethanol partial current density over previously researched techniques, demonstrating the catalyst's enhanced performance for carbon conversion applications.

The Opportunity

The technology targets the carbon capture/conversion market ($1.4B in 2022, projected $2.5B by 2026 at 15.6% CAGR) and CO2 post-processing market ($837M in 2021, projected $1.7B by 2026). The primary byproduct, ethanol, represents a $44B+ market in 2025. Applications include industrial carbon capture systems, renewable ethanol production, and conversion of greenhouse gases into transportable, commercially valuable products for chemical and fuel industries.

Meet the Team

Matthew M. Montemore, Ph.D.
Matthew M. Montemore, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor

Robert and Gayle Longmire Early Career Professor in Chemical Engineering
Headshot portrait of John Scott.
John Scott
Technology Commercialization

Associate Director, Office of Intellectual Property Management
 

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Aileen Dingus

Aileen J. Dingus, MSE

Program Director

adingus1@tulane.edu