4.8 Article

A simple convertible electrolyzer in membraneless and membrane-based modes for understanding water splitting mechanism

Journal

JOURNAL OF POWER SOURCES
Volume 487, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jpowsour.2020.229353

Keywords

Membraneless; Convertible electrolyzer; In-situ visualization; Coplanar electrodes; Water splitting; Oxygen evolution reaction (OER); Hydrogen evolution reaction (HER)

Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy's Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE) under the Fuel Cell Technologies Office [DE-EE0008426, DE-EE0008423]
  2. National Renewable Energy Laboratory [DE-AC36-08GO28308]
  3. National Energy Technology Laboratory [DE-FE0011585]

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A simple convertible electrolyzer has been proposed for comprehensive investigations of water splitting under different electrolyte conditions. Results show that the location of water splitting reaction varies in pure water and alkaline, acidic electrolytes.
State-of-the-art membrane-based electrolyzers such as proton exchange membrane electrolyzer cells, are costly, susceptible to degradation, and time-consuming for electrode evaluation and triple-phase boundary electrochemical reaction studies. Here, a simple convertible electrolyzer in membraneless and membrane-based modes is proposed. For the first time, this enables comprehensive investigations of water splitting with pure water, acidic and alkaline electrolytes in one cell. With the simple electrolyzer and high-speed visualization system, the influences of flow rate, electrolytes, concentration, and Nafion membrane on the oxygen evolution reactions (OERs), hydrogen evolution reactions (HERs) and electrolyzer performance are comprehensively investigated. Visualization results reveal that water splitting only occurred at the edge between the electrode and the Nafion membrane in pure water. However, they occurred on the whole electrode surface in alkaline and acidic electrolytes, indicating easily tunable reaction sites with the convertible electrolyzer. This demonstrates the feasibility of using the simple convertible electrolyzer for understanding the water splitting mechanism. The relation between electrolyte thickness and resistances with different electrolytes is also quantified. This work provides an insight for optimizing electrochemical devices while delivering an inexpensive and fast way for electrode evaluations and electrochemical reaction studies.

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