Enhanced Corrosion Resistance in Aluminum-Based Electrolyzer Components via Stoichiometry Tuned Atomic Layer-Deposited TiO x Films.
Kesong WangAdam PaxsonThomas I ValdezAhmet ErlatPing-Che LeeSeongUk YunPranjali KhajanjiZichen ZhangAndrew C KummelPrabhakar R BandaruPublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2024)
Titanium (Ti) is widely used as anode current collectors in proton exchange membrane (PEM)-based water electrolyzers due to its self-passivated oxide layer, which protects it from corrosion in acidic solutions. However, the cost of the material and machining process for Ti is high. A wider utilization of water electrolyzers to produce hydrogen could be favored by the use of less expensive coated aluminum (Al) substrates, which could potentially replace high-cost Ti-based components. It is shown here by depositing a pinhole-free oxygen vacancy-rich titanium oxide (TiO x ) protection layer by atomic layer deposition (ALD), the corrosion resistance of Al substrates in acidic environments at oxygen evolution potentials can be enhanced. The optimization of the oxygen vacancy concentration is accomplished by tuning the ALD parameters to achieve ideal stoichiometry and conformal coating on rough substrates. The robustness of the coatings was evaluated at high potentials (2.4 V vs NHE = normal hydrogen electrode) in low pH conditions. A low TiO x dissolution rate of the order of ∼6 nm year -1 was observed. By testing under industrially relevant conditions, i.e., high applied voltages (2.4 V) and low pH, an Al loss at around the zero ppb level was achieved using optimized ALD parameters. It is proposed that a 40 nm TiO x coating on Al may be adequate to provide 60,000 h of durability in a PEM water electrolyzer anode current collector.