Engineering Realities of CO₂ Electroreduction (CO₂RR) | Why the True Bottleneck of the Formic Acid Pathway Lies in Product Concentration and Separation—Not Electrolysis

2026-02-08

Among the various product pathways of CO₂ electroreduction (CO₂RR), the formic acid (formate) route is often regarded as the one closest to industrialization.

The rationale appears straightforward: compared with multi-carbon pathways, formic acid formation does not rely on complex C–C coupling reactions, does not require extremely selective catalyst windows, and does not depend on exotic catalyst systems. In theory, achieving high current density and high Faradaic efficiency should be sufficient to convert CO₂ into a marketable chemical.

However, engineering practice consistently demonstrates that theoretical feasibility does not equate to industrial viability.
What ultimately determines whether a CO₂RR pathway can be commercialized is not what molecules are generated inside the reactor, but whether a deliverable, saleable product stream can be produced downstream.

For the formic acid pathway, the dominant bottlenecks are rarely electrochemical conversion itself. Instead, they are concentrated in two critical areas:

  • Whether sufficiently high product concentration can be achieved

  • Whether the separation and purification chain can be executed at acceptable cost


    640_副本.jpg


1. Most CO₂RR Systems Do Not Produce “Formic Acid Products,” but Dilute Formate Streams

In practical engineering systems, the direct output of many CO₂RR setups is not 85% or 99% commercial-grade formic acid. More commonly, it is:

  • Low-concentration aqueous formate solutions

  • Containing significant electrolyte ions, carbonates, and dissolved gases

  • With product concentrations often limited to only a few weight percent

From a laboratory perspective, this outcome is not a failure—the carbon has indeed been reduced.
From an engineering and commercial standpoint, however, such streams do not constitute products, but rather intermediate process streams requiring extensive downstream treatment.

In many CO₂RR projects, it is precisely this downstream processing stage that determines the fate of the entire system.


2. Why the Formic Acid Route Is Often “Technically Feasible but Commercially Constrained”

Electrolysis-related performance indicators are well understood and widely reported:

  • Current density

  • Faradaic efficiency

  • Single-cell voltage

  • Stack lifetime

Yet for engineering deployment, the formic acid pathway must also satisfy two decisive system-level criteria.

A. Product Concentration: Defining the Scale of Downstream Engineering

If the output is a 1–5 wt% formic acid or formate solution, downstream processing becomes inherently intensive:

  • Removal of large volumes of water

  • Separation of salts and impurities

  • Management of dissolved gases and residual CO₂

This challenge is not a matter of incremental optimization—it is a fundamental physical constraint.
The lower the product concentration, the larger and more energy-intensive the downstream system becomes.

B. Separation Cost: Defining Commercial Feasibility

Formic acid separation is rarely a single operation. It typically involves a combination of:

  • Acidification or ion exchange

  • Desalination

  • Dehydration (often the dominant contributor to energy demand and equipment size)

  • Final purification and quality control (acidity, ionic impurities, metals, TOC)

In many projects, it is at this stage that teams recognize a critical reality:
electrolysis is only the first half of the process—the major cost drivers lie downstream.

640 (1)_副本.jpg


3. The Engineering Constraint Equation: Low Concentration Equals High CAPEX and High OPEX

The most challenging aspect of the formic acid route is that even with excellent electrochemical performance, insufficient product concentration leads to two unavoidable outcomes.

1) Escalating Capital Expenditure (CAPEX)

Low-concentration product streams require:

  • Larger storage tanks

  • Higher circulation flow rates

  • Larger separation units

  • Expanded water treatment and thermal management systems

As a result, the project increasingly resembles a separation plant designed to handle dilute streams, rather than a compact CO₂RR conversion unit.

2) Rising Operating Expenditure (OPEX)

In fully integrated systems:

  • Energy consumption for separation and purification can match or exceed electrolysis energy demand

  • Water treatment, pumping, compression, and off-gas handling continuously add to operating costs

In such cases, the economic value generated by converting CO₂ into formic acid can be largely offset by the cost of concentrating and purifying the product.


4. Why High Faradaic Efficiency and High Current Density Alone Do Not Ensure Commercialization

A common misconception in CO₂RR development is the assumption that strong electrochemical metrics automatically translate into viable systems.

In reality:

  • Strong laboratory performance ≠ viable product logistics

  • A functioning reaction pathway ≠ a functioning industrial system

If higher reaction rates are not accompanied by increased product concentration and a shortened separation chain, overall system economics remain unfavorable—regardless of how impressive the electrochemical data may appear.

640 (2)_副本.jpg


5. Engineering-Driven Design: Starting from Product Logistics, Not Catalysts

Industrial engineering teams approaching the CO₂RR formic acid pathway do not begin with catalyst optimization alone. Instead, they typically start by addressing three foundational questions.

1. Final Deliverable: Formic Acid or Formate?

  • Formates are easier to generate electrochemically, but downstream acidification, ion exchange, and recovery must be carefully evaluated

  • Formic acid offers a shorter separation chain but imposes stricter requirements on membranes, electrodes, and system stability

In practice, this decision is less about chemistry and more about choosing a separation strategy.

2. Can Product Concentration Be Structurally Increased?

Systems that cannot achieve meaningful concentration increases tend to become separation-driven projects with rapidly escalating complexity and cost.

Common engineering approaches include:

  • Reactor designs that inherently favor higher product concentration

  • Shifting concentration steps upstream through electro-separation rather than relying solely on thermal separation

3. Is the Separation Strategy Electrically Driven?

For formic acid systems, electrically driven separation—such as electrodialysis or bipolar membrane electrodialysis (BPMED)—is frequently adopted not for novelty, but because it can offer a more economically balanced solution than heat-intensive alternatives.

640 (3)_副本.jpg


6. EPC Energy’s Engineering Perspective: Where the Formic Acid Pathway Will Be Won or Lost

From an engineering standpoint, the competitive edge of the formic acid route will not be determined by catalyst performance alone.

Instead, success will hinge on the ability to deliver integrated systems that simultaneously achieve:

  1. Higher deliverable product concentrations

  2. Shortened and simplified separation chains

  3. Long-term continuous operation at engineering scale (5,000 hours or more)

Failure in any one of these areas will significantly constrain commercial deployment.


Conclusion | CO₂RR Industrialization Is About Turning Molecules into Products

The formic acid pathway is widely viewed as promising not because it is the most advanced conceptually, but because it is among the closest to engineering feasibility.

Yet one principle must remain clear:
electrolysis is only the first half of the system—product concentration and separation define the second half and ultimately determine success or failure.

True industrialization of CO₂ electrochemical conversion is not about proving that molecules can be formed, but about demonstrating that products can be delivered reliably, continuously, and economically.


share