Abstract
Motivated by the need to lower the cost of hydrogen (H2) production by water electrolysis, significant research efforts are focused on making proton (H+) exchange membrane (PEM) water electrolyzers more efficient and capable of operating at higher current densities. These aims can be met by making H+ conducting membranes thinner, which has the effect of lowering ohmic drops across the membrane that represent the largest efficiency loss at high current densities (>2 A cm-2). However, decreasing membrane thickness below 50 microns is not trivial due to trade-offs between membrane resistance, H2 cross-over (safety), membrane degradation, and manufacturing throughput. Herein, descriptions of key processes, limitations, and trade-offs that arise in thin membranes are provided that can be used to guide the design of ultrathin (i.e., sub-micron thick), low-resistance membrane materials that have potential to transform the field of clean H2 production.
Supplementary materials
Title
Description of technoeconomic analysis
Description
A description of model calculations and technoeconomic analysis used to generate Figure 1c.
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