Nanoporous Nickel Cathode with an Electrostatic Chlorine-Resistant Surface for Industrial Seawater Electrolysis Hydrogen Production.
Jing WangYanqi LiTian XuJie ZhengKaiwen XiaoBingbing SunMing GeXiaolei YuanCheng-Gang ZhouZhao CaiPublished in: Inorganic chemistry (2024)
Seawater electrolysis presents a promising avenue for green hydrogen production toward a carbon-free society. However, the electrode materials face significant challenges including severe chlorine-induced corrosion and high reaction overpotential, resulting in low energy conversion efficiency and low current density operation. Herein, we put forward a nanoporous nickel (npNi) cathode with high chlorine corrosion resistance for energy-efficient seawater electrolysis at industrial current densities (0.4-1 A cm -2 ). With the merits of an electrostatic chlorine-resistant surface, modulated Ni active sites, and a robust three-dimensional open structure, the npNi electrode showed a low hydrogen evolution reaction overpotential of 310 mV and a high electricity-hydrogen conversion efficiency of 59.7% at 400 mA cm -2 in real seawater and outperformed most Ni-based seawater electrolysis cathodes in recent publications and the commercial Ni foam electrode (459 mV, 46.4%) under the same test condition. In situ electrochemical impedance spectroscopy, high-frame-rate optical microscopy, and first-principles calculation revealed that the improved corrosion resistance, enhanced intrinsic activity, and mass transfer were responsible for the lowered electrocatalytic overpotential and enhanced energy efficiency.
Keyphrases
- metal organic framework
- molecularly imprinted
- drinking water
- reduced graphene oxide
- carbon nanotubes
- high resolution
- wastewater treatment
- gold nanoparticles
- single molecule
- minimally invasive
- solid state
- magnetic resonance imaging
- endothelial cells
- magnetic resonance
- high glucose
- optical coherence tomography
- mass spectrometry
- oxidative stress