Engineering Biological Materials for Carbon Capture and the Electrochemical Reduction of Carbon Dioxide to Light Hydrocarbons

Decarbonization of the global economy will require the identification of substitute carbon sources for the production of fuels, plastics, textiles, pharmaceuticals, and other products that are derived from fossil carbon. The gigaton scale of carbon dioxide emissions necessitates the development of b...

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Main Author: Lehnhardt, Eric Christian
Other Authors: Belcher, Angela M.
Format: Thesis
Published: Massachusetts Institute of Technology 2022
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/139955
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9046-6389
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author Lehnhardt, Eric Christian
author2 Belcher, Angela M.
author_facet Belcher, Angela M.
Lehnhardt, Eric Christian
author_sort Lehnhardt, Eric Christian
collection MIT
description Decarbonization of the global economy will require the identification of substitute carbon sources for the production of fuels, plastics, textiles, pharmaceuticals, and other products that are derived from fossil carbon. The gigaton scale of carbon dioxide emissions necessitates the development of better materials for its capture, yet offers the opportunity to use purified carbon dioxide gas as an input to the electrochemical carbon dioxide reduction reaction. This reaction combines carbon dioxide, water, and electricity in the presence of specialized catalysts to create light hydrocarbons such as methane, ethanol, and ethylene, precursors critical to many of the products that power the modern economy. In this thesis, I present a range of biological materials capable of capturing carbon dioxide and catalyzing its conversion to products. First, catalysts made from genetically-engineered M13 bacteriophage are light-crosslinked and metallized to create copper electrodes that explore the effect of pore structure on catalyst performance. Second, catalysts made via copper electrodeposition are modified by viral proteins to create nanostructured, crystalline electrodes that shift product distributions towards C1 hydrocarbons like formate and methane. Third, catalysts made from biological carbon nanofibers template copper nanoparticles that increase catalyst activity and generate product distributions on par with copper catalysts found in the literature. Fourth, amine resins templated on the surface of engineered M13 bacteriophage produce high-surface-area materials capable of carbon dioxide capture and release. Additionally, I exposit reaction systems for maximizing gas availability and reaction stability for single- and double-sided electrodes in carbon dioxide electroreduction. The biological catalysts and membranes described here provide structure/performance information to advance the design of specialized catalysts and membranes for the sustainable creation of hydrocarbon products from atmospheric carbon dioxide.
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spelling mit-1721.1/1399552022-02-08T03:43:02Z Engineering Biological Materials for Carbon Capture and the Electrochemical Reduction of Carbon Dioxide to Light Hydrocarbons Lehnhardt, Eric Christian Belcher, Angela M. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Biological Engineering Decarbonization of the global economy will require the identification of substitute carbon sources for the production of fuels, plastics, textiles, pharmaceuticals, and other products that are derived from fossil carbon. The gigaton scale of carbon dioxide emissions necessitates the development of better materials for its capture, yet offers the opportunity to use purified carbon dioxide gas as an input to the electrochemical carbon dioxide reduction reaction. This reaction combines carbon dioxide, water, and electricity in the presence of specialized catalysts to create light hydrocarbons such as methane, ethanol, and ethylene, precursors critical to many of the products that power the modern economy. In this thesis, I present a range of biological materials capable of capturing carbon dioxide and catalyzing its conversion to products. First, catalysts made from genetically-engineered M13 bacteriophage are light-crosslinked and metallized to create copper electrodes that explore the effect of pore structure on catalyst performance. Second, catalysts made via copper electrodeposition are modified by viral proteins to create nanostructured, crystalline electrodes that shift product distributions towards C1 hydrocarbons like formate and methane. Third, catalysts made from biological carbon nanofibers template copper nanoparticles that increase catalyst activity and generate product distributions on par with copper catalysts found in the literature. Fourth, amine resins templated on the surface of engineered M13 bacteriophage produce high-surface-area materials capable of carbon dioxide capture and release. Additionally, I exposit reaction systems for maximizing gas availability and reaction stability for single- and double-sided electrodes in carbon dioxide electroreduction. The biological catalysts and membranes described here provide structure/performance information to advance the design of specialized catalysts and membranes for the sustainable creation of hydrocarbon products from atmospheric carbon dioxide. Ph.D. 2022-02-07T15:15:24Z 2022-02-07T15:15:24Z 2021-09 2021-11-17T22:09:46.873Z Thesis https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/139955 https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9046-6389 In Copyright - Educational Use Permitted Copyright MIT http://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-EDU/1.0/ application/pdf Massachusetts Institute of Technology
spellingShingle Lehnhardt, Eric Christian
Engineering Biological Materials for Carbon Capture and the Electrochemical Reduction of Carbon Dioxide to Light Hydrocarbons
title Engineering Biological Materials for Carbon Capture and the Electrochemical Reduction of Carbon Dioxide to Light Hydrocarbons
title_full Engineering Biological Materials for Carbon Capture and the Electrochemical Reduction of Carbon Dioxide to Light Hydrocarbons
title_fullStr Engineering Biological Materials for Carbon Capture and the Electrochemical Reduction of Carbon Dioxide to Light Hydrocarbons
title_full_unstemmed Engineering Biological Materials for Carbon Capture and the Electrochemical Reduction of Carbon Dioxide to Light Hydrocarbons
title_short Engineering Biological Materials for Carbon Capture and the Electrochemical Reduction of Carbon Dioxide to Light Hydrocarbons
title_sort engineering biological materials for carbon capture and the electrochemical reduction of carbon dioxide to light hydrocarbons
url https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/139955
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9046-6389
work_keys_str_mv AT lehnhardtericchristian engineeringbiologicalmaterialsforcarboncaptureandtheelectrochemicalreductionofcarbondioxidetolighthydrocarbons