Jinli Qiao is a professor, PhD supervisor, and disciplines leader of the College of Environmental Science and Engineering, Donghua University, China. She earned her PhD in electrochemistry from Yamaguchi University, Japan in 2004. Dr. Qiao has more than 20 years of scientific research experience, particularly in the area of electrochemical material development and energy storage and conversion. She has published numerous papers and coauthored five books/book chapters. Professor Qiao is also the organizer/co-chair and committee member of several international conferences, the guest editor for Electrochimica Acta/International Journal of Hydrogen Energy/Applied Energy, and the reviewer editor of Frontiers in Fuel Cells. Yuyu Liu is an associate professor at the Graduate School of Environmental Studies, Tohoku University, Japan. Dr. Liu earned his PhD in environmental engineering from Yamaguchi University, Japan in 2003. He then worked at Kyushu Environmental Evaluation Association, Osaka Institute of Technology, Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology, and Yokohama National University as a postdoctoral and research fellow. Dr. Liu has more than 10 years of experience in environmental science and technology, particularly in the areas of air quality monitoring, water and soil research, and their associated instrument development. He has published over 40 papers and over 20 conference proceedings. Jiujun Zhang is a principal research officer and core competency leader at the Energy, Mining & Environment, National Research Council of Canada (NRC-EME). Dr. Zhang earned his BS and MSc in electrochemistry from Peking University in 1982 and 1985, respectively, and his PhD in electrochemistry from Wuhan University in 1988. He holds more than 14 adjunct professorships, including one at the University of Waterloo, the University of British Columbia, and Peking University. Dr. Zh
The authors have managed to give a comprehensive overview of a field of research that attracts considerable interest from the scientific community: the electroreduction of CO2. This book is highly recommended for chemists and more generally scientists interested in the various remediation approaches that can deal with carbon dioxide. -Daniel Guay, INRS Energie Materiaux Telecommunication, Quebec, Canada This book is a very comprehensive review on electrochemical reduction of CO2. It takes into consideration all aspects on how to transform CO2 in a valuable alternative compound. All chemistry is considered: from thermodynamic aspects to catalysis, considering future challenges. -Stefania Specchia, Politecnico di Torino, Dept. Applied Science & Technology, Italy I think this book is a high-quality monograph and textbook. It will help researchers and developers track the recent advances in utilizing CO2 to produce the carbon fuels by electrochemical reduction, and graduate students to understand CO2 chemical reduction technology. -Cheng Zhong, Tianjin University, China This is the most comprehensive monograph I have seen about CO2 electrochemical reduction. The readers may widely include electrochemists, graduate students, and even college students. -Andy (Xueliang) Sun, PhD, Professor, Department of Mechanical & Materials Engineering, Western University, Ontario, Canada The authors in this book provide a comprehensive overview of fundamentals and applications about CO2 electroreduction for graduate students, scientists and engineers in environment and energy areas. Especially, thermodynamics and electrode kinetics in this book would be very helpful to understand the CO2 electrochemical reduction. This book is strongly recommended for them to solve their research issues. - Kunchan Lee, Showa Denko K.K., Tokyo, Japan