Electrically Insulated Catalyst-Ionomer Anode Interfaces towards Durable Alkaline Membrane Electrolyzer

18 January 2024, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Anion-exchange-membrane water electrolysis (AEMWE) is an emerging technology for scalable hydrogen production. AEMWE has poor durability when operating without supporting electrolyte due to the oxidation of ionomers and membranes in contact with anode oxygen evolution reaction (OER) catalyst. We report a new “passivated” anode architecture for AEMWE where OER catalysts and ionomers are physically separated with a thin film amorphous oxide coating that is electrically insulating but conductive to hydroxide ions. We find that 2–3 nm of HfOx passivation layers show sufficient hydroxide ion transport to minimally limit the cell performance while suppressing ionomer degradation with both Ir (500 mA·cm−2 for 40 h) and CoOx (1.0 A·cm−2 for 100 h) model porous-transport-layer-supported catalysts in AEMWE. This interfacial engineering approach guides electrode design to improve the durability of AEMWE, particularly for systems operating with pure water feed.

Keywords

water electrolysis
anion exchange membrane

Supplementary materials

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Supporting Information
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Experimental procedures and additional materials characterization and electrolyzer data
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