Smarter Electrolysis: Pairing Reactions for Sustainable Energy and Chemistry

October 21, 2025

Newswise — For more than two centuries, fossil fuels have dominated global energy and chemical production, accounting for over 80% of consumption and driving a steep rise in CO₂ emissions. This reliance has contributed to climate change, energy insecurity, and environmental degradation. Although renewable energy investment has grown rapidly, conventional chemical processes remain carbon-intensive and economically inflexible. Electrochemistry powered by renewables offers a promising pathway: mild operating conditions, abundant feedstocks, and scalable systems. However, inefficiencies in oxygen evolution at the anode limit its potential and add costs. Due to these problems, there is an urgent need to develop integrated electrosynthesis systems that replace oxygen evolution reaction (OER) with efficient, value-added reactions to achieve dual benefits.

A research team from Jiangsu University, the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Hasselt University, and MIT has published a comprehensive review (DOI: 10.1016/j.esci.2024.100333) in eScience (online July, 2025) examining how electrosynthesis is evolving from water electrolysis to dual-value-added production. The study analyzes catalysts, electrolyzers, and reaction mechanisms that enable coupling of alternative oxidation reactions with reduction processes such as CO₂, nitrogen, and organic molecule conversion. By highlighting both progress and challenges, the authors provide a roadmap for advancing electrochemical systems that simultaneously yield clean fuels and market-relevant chemicals.

The review emphasizes that replacing the sluggish OER with alternative oxidation reactions—such as methanol, glycerol, or sulfide oxidation—dramatically improves system efficiency while producing useful by-products like formic acid, acetic acid, hydrogen peroxide, or elemental sulfur. When paired with reduction reactions beyond hydrogen evolution, such as CO₂ reduction (CO₂RR), CO reduction (CORR), or nitrogen reduction (NRR), these systems achieve dual outputs with lower energy consumption.

Catalyst development is central to this progress. Advances in nanostructured materials, including alloyed, doped, and defect-engineered catalysts, have expanded active sites and boosted selectivity. The deployment of self-supported electrodes and gas-diffusion electrodes further enhances stability and conversion rates. Hybrid electrolyzers, evolving from H-type cells to flow cells and membrane electrode assemblies, are enabling industrial-scale current densities.

Equally important are advanced in situ and operando techniques—such as infrared spectroscopy, Raman spectroscopy, X-ray absorption, and electron microscopy—that allow direct monitoring of catalytic intermediates and structural evolution. Alongside computational methods like density functional theory (DFT) and machine learning, these tools clarify mechanisms, optimize reaction pathways, and accelerate rational catalyst design. Together, these innovations mark a major leap toward sustainable and economically viable electrosynthesis.

“Electrochemical systems that simultaneously produce two valuable outputs represent a paradigm shift for green chemistry,” said co-authors Prof. Zhenhai Wen, Prof. Hao Zhang and Prof. Nianjun Yang. “By coupling OER alternatives with reduction reactions, we can not only lower the energy barrier but also generate high-value chemicals alongside clean fuels. The integration of advanced catalysts, novel electrolyzer architectures, and powerful characterization techniques provides unprecedented opportunities to design scalable, efficient processes. This dual-benefit approach is crucial for moving closer to a truly sustainable and circular chemical industry.”

The development of dual-value electrosynthesis systems holds significant promise for energy, environment, and industry. Beyond reducing carbon emissions, these systems enable the cost-effective production of green hydrogen, fuels, fertilizers, and chemical feedstocks, addressing both climate and resource challenges. Coupling reactions such as CO₂ reduction with alcohol oxidation or waste remediation provides added economic and ecological value. In the longer term, the combination of advanced catalysts, computationally guided design, and industrial-scale electrolyzers could transform chemical manufacturing into a low-carbon, energy-efficient process. This strategy directly contributes to global net-zero ambitions while creating new opportunities for renewable-driven industrial chemistry.

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References

DOI

10.1016/j.esci.2024.100333

Original Source URL

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.esci.2024.100333

Funding information

This work was financially supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 22209183, 22225902, U22A20436, 52436005), the National key Research & Development Program of China (2022YFE0115900, 2021YFA1501500), the CAS-Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization (CSIRO) Joint Research Projects (121835KYSB20200039), Advanced Talents of Jiangsu University, China (Grant No. 23JDG027), and Natural Science Foundation of Fujian Province (2021J05100).

About eScience

eScience – a Diamond Open Access journal cooperated with KeAi and published online at ScienceDirect. eScience is founded by Nankai University (China) in 2021 and aims to publish high quality academic papers on the latest and finest scientific and technological research in interdisciplinary fields related to energy, electrochemistry, electronics, and environment. eScience provides insights, innovation and imagination for these fields by built consecutive discovery and invention. Now eScience has been indexed by SCIE, CAS, Scopus and DOAJ. Its first impact factor is 36.6, which is ranked first in the field of electrochemistry.

 

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