4.8 Article

A membrane-based seawater electrolyser for hydrogen generation

Journal

NATURE
Volume 612, Issue 7941, Pages 673-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-05379-5

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [52004166, 52104400, 51827901]
  2. Science and Technology Department of Sichuan Province [2020YFH0012]
  3. Program for Guangdong Introducing Innovative and Entrepreneurial Teams [2019ZT08G315]
  4. Institute of New Energy and Low-Carbon Technology, Sichuan University

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This article introduces a method for direct seawater electrolysis for hydrogen production, which can solve the problems of side reactions and corrosion. In the experiment, this method stably operated for over 3200 hours under practical application conditions. The method is efficient, size-flexible, scalable, and has high practical value without increasing the operation cost.
Electrochemical saline water electrolysis using renewable energy as input is a highly desirable and sustainable method for the mass production of green hydrogen(1-7); however, its practical viability is seriously challenged by insufficient durability because of the electrode side reactions and corrosion issues arising from the complex components of seawater. Although catalyst engineering using polyanion coatings to suppress corrosion by chloride ions or creating highly selective electrocatalysts has been extensively exploited with modest success, it is still far from satisfactory for practical applications(8-14). Indirect seawater splitting by using a pre-desalination process can avoid side-reaction and corrosion problems(15-21), but it requires additional energy input, making it economically less attractive. In addition, the independent bulky desalination system makes seawater electrolysis systems less flexible in terms of size. Here we propose a direct seawater electrolysis method for hydrogen production that radically addresses the side-reaction and corrosion problems. A demonstration system was stably operated at a current density of 250milliamperes per square centimetre for over 3,200hours under practical application conditions without failure. This strategy realizes efficient, size-flexible and scalable direct seawater electrolysis in a way similar to freshwater splitting without a notable increase in operation cost, and has high potential for practical application. Importantly, this configuration and mechanism promises further applications in simultaneous water-based effluent treatment and resource recovery and hydrogen generation in one step.

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