The results concerning the effect of confined ionic liquid ions on the gas sorption properties of porous carbon materials are expected to achieve high impact. The concept to adjust pore architectures and surface chemistries by addition of a low vapor pressure liquid film instead of by the synthetic procedure of the carbon materials themselves promises a way towards precise adjustment of sorption properties. Alone the approach followed in CILCat to measure the properties of confined ionic liquids and resulting pore structures by volumetric sorption devices, thermal response measurements, and differential scanning calorimetry is a toolbox which goes beyond the state of the art.
The technological implementation of the CILCat concept into electrochemically-driven conversion of small molecules will need more research and demonstration in the second phase of CILCat. Combining sorption and catalytic properties of materials with electrodes, coupled electrochemical processes, and product separation/analytics is not at all a trivial task and requires the combination of various expertise from the fields of chemistry, materials science, engineering. The project team is currently working on the implementation of this task of CILCat. At the present state, the existence of a advanced laboratory-scale electrochemical setup for the characterization of eNRR in different electrolyte systems which provides reliable and reproduceable data can be seen as a major contribution to the field. Over the last years, eNRR (especially in aqueous electrolytes) became a topic of intense discussion in the scientific community due to differing results obtained between different research laboratories. CILCat is currently making a noteworthy contribution here to resolve these issues and to clarify the origin of ammonia but also to investigate possible degradation pathways of actually formed ammonia under electrochemical conditions.