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Engineering Bipolar Interfaces for Water Electrolysis Using Earth-Abundant Anodes

Developing efficient and low-cost water electrolyzers for clean hydrogen production to reduce the carbon footprint of traditional hard-to-decarbonize sectors is a grand challenge toward tackling climate change. Bipolar-based water electrolysis combines the benefits of kinetically more favorable half...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:ACS energy letters 2023-12, Vol.8 (12), p.5275-5280
Main Authors: Tricker, Andrew W, Lee, Jason K, Babbe, Finn, Shin, Jason R, Weber, Adam Z, Peng, Xiong
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Developing efficient and low-cost water electrolyzers for clean hydrogen production to reduce the carbon footprint of traditional hard-to-decarbonize sectors is a grand challenge toward tackling climate change. Bipolar-based water electrolysis combines the benefits of kinetically more favorable half-reactions and relatively inexpensive cell components compared to incumbent technologies, yet it has been shown to have limited performance. Here, we develop and test a bipolar-interface water electrolyzer (BPIWE) by combining an alkaline anode porous transport electrode with an acidic catalyst-coated membrane. The role of TiO as a water dissociation (WD) catalyst is investigated at three representative loadings, which indicates the importance of balancing ionic conductivity and WD activity derived from the electric field for optimal TiO loading. The optimized BPIWE exhibits negligible performance degradation up to 500 h at 400 mA cm fed with pure water using earth-abundant anode materials. Our experimental findings provide insights into designing bipolar-based electrochemical devices.
ISSN:2380-8195
2380-8195
DOI:10.1021/acsenergylett.3c02351