4.6 Article

Improved water electrolysis using magnetic heating of FeC-Ni core-shell nanoparticles

Journal

NATURE ENERGY
Volume 3, Issue 6, Pages 476-483

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41560-018-0132-1

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Funding

  1. LEPMI, within the framework of the Centre of Excellence of Multifunctional Architectured Materials (CEMAM) [AN-10-LABX-44-01]
  2. IUF

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Water electrolysis enables the storage of renewable electricity via the chemical bonds of hydrogen. However, proton-exchangemembrane electrolysers are impeded by the high cost and low availability of their noble-metal electrocatalysts, whereas alkaline electrolysers operate at a low power density. Here, we demonstrate that electrocatalytic reactions relevant for water splitting can be improved by employing magnetic heating of noble-metal-free catalysts. Using nickel-coated iron carbide nanoparticles, which are prone to magnetic heating under high-frequency alternating magnetic fields, the overpotential (at 20 mA cm(-2)) required for oxygen evolution in an alkaline water-electrolysis flow-cell was decreased by 200 mV and that for hydrogen evolution was decreased by 100 mV. This enhancement of oxygen-evolution kinetics is equivalent to a rise of the cell temperature to similar to 200 degrees C, but in practice it increased by 5 degrees C only. This work suggests that, in the future, water splitting near the equilibrium voltage could be possible at room temperature, which is currently beyond reach in the classic approach to water electrolysis.

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