Porous Solid Electrolyte (PSE) Reactor for Electrosynthesis of Pure Liquid Chemicals, CEPLCPSER
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A Porous Solid Electrolyte (PSE) Reactor represents the cutting edge of electrochemical synthesis. While traditional reactors use liquid electrolytes (like KOH or H2SO4) to transport ions, a PSE reactor uses a solid ion-conductor (like Nafion or a ceramic) sandwiched around a porous middle chamber to produce pure chemical products without any salt or solvent contamination.
Traditional reactors often result in a "salty soup" where your desired product is mixed with the liquid electrolyte. A PSE reactor solves several industrial headaches: (1) No Downstream Separation: You don't need expensive distillation to remove salts; the product comes out pure. (2) Zero Salt Crossover: In CO2 reduction, liquid electrolytes often cause "carbonate scaling" which clogs the system. PSE reactors remain "dry" at the electrodes, preventing this. (3) High Concentration: By slowing the water sweep, you can achieve much higher weight-percentages of products like formic acid (>20%).
The PSE reactor has been widely used to produce high purity liquid products, such as hydrogen peroxide, formic acid, and ethylene glycol.
| Part Number |
CEPLCPSER (C-EPLC-PSER) |
| Cell Features |
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| Cell Sizes |
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| Cell Types and Assembling Diagram |
(1) Two Electrode Configuration without Serpentine Flow Channels (2) Three-Electrode Configuration without Serpentine Flow Channels (Ag/AgCl reference electrode is included) (3) Two-Electrode Configuration with Serpentine Flow Channels (4) Two-Electrode Configuration with Serpentine Flow Channels and Visual Window
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| Flow Pump (Optional) |
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| Note | The cell components should be thoroughly cleaned and dried after use. |
References:
2. E. Zhao, et al. Optimization and scaling-up of porous solid electrolyte electrochemical reactors for hydrogen peroxide electrosynthesis, Nature Communications. 2025, 16, 3212.



