Long-term Durability of Seawater Electrolysis for Hydrogen: From Catalysts to Systems.

Angew Chem Int Ed Engl

State Key Laboratory of Silicate Materials for Architectures & State Key Laboratory of Advanced Technology for Materials Synthesis and Processing & School of Chemistry, Chemical Engineering and Life Sciences & Foshan Xianhu Laboratory & Laoshan Laboratory & School of Materials Science and Engineering & International School of Materials Science and Engineering, Wuhan University of Technology, Wuhan, 430070, China.

Published: November 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Direct electrochemical seawater splitting offers a renewable and scalable method for producing green hydrogen, especially in areas lacking ultra-pure water, but faces significant challenges due to low durability from complex ions in seawater.
  • The review analyzes the durability issues at both the anode and cathode during seawater electrolysis and suggests strategies for improving the lifespan of electrocatalysts and electrodes, such as using anti-corrosion materials and optimizing surface properties.
  • The findings highlight a shift in focus towards managing Cl ions and the cathodic reactions, suggesting that these developments may help accelerate the commercialization of seawater electrolysis technologies for clean hydrogen generation.

Article Abstract

Direct electrochemical seawater splitting is a renewable, scalable, and potentially economic approach for green hydrogen production in environments where ultra-pure water is not readily available. However, issues related to low durability caused by complex ions in seawater pose great challenges for its industrialization. In this review, a mechanistic analysis of durability issues of electrolytic seawater splitting is discussed. We critically analyze the development of seawater electrolysis and identify the durability challenges at both the anode and cathode. Particular emphasis is given to elucidating rational strategies for designing electrocatalysts/electrodes/interfaces with long lifetimes in realistic seawater including inducing passivating anion layers, preferential OHadsorption, employing anti-corrosion materials, fabricating protective layers, immobilizing Cl on the surface of electrocatalysts, tailoring Cl adsorption sites, inhibition of OH binding to Mg and Ca, inhibition of Mg and Ca hydroxide precipitation adherence, and co-electrosynthesis of nano-sized Mg hydroxides. Synthesis methods of electrocatalysts/electrodes and innovations in electrolyzer are also discussed. Furthermore, the prospects for developing seawater splitting technologies for clean hydrogen generation are summarized. We found that researchers have rethought the role of Cl ions, as well as more attention to cathodic reaction and electrolyzers, which is conducive to accelerate the commercialization of seawater electrolysis.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/anie.202412087DOI Listing

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