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A Dual-Cation Exchange Membrane Electrolyzer for Continuous H 2 Production from Seawater.

Yongwen RenFaying FanYaojian ZhangLin ChenZhe WangJiedong LiJingwen ZhaoBo TangGuanglei Cui
Published in: Advanced science (Weinheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany) (2024)
Direct seawater splitting (DSS) offers an aspirational route toward green hydrogen (H 2 ) production but remains challenging when operating in a practically continuous manner, mainly due to the difficulty in establishing the water supply-consumption balance under the interference from impurity ions. A DSS system is reported for continuous ampere-level H 2 production by coupling a dual-cation exchange membrane (CEM) three-compartment architecture with a circulatory electrolyte design. Monovalent-selective CEMs decouple the transmembrane water migration from interferences of Mg 2+ , Ca 2+ , and Cl - ions while maintaining ionic neutrality during electrolysis; the self-loop concentrated alkaline electrolyte ensures the constant gradient of water chemical potential, allowing a specific water supply-consumption balance relationship in a seawater-electrolyte-H 2 sequence to be built among an expanded current range. Even paired with commercialized Ni foams, this electrolyzer (model size: 2 × 2 cm 2 ) continuously produces H 2 from flowing seawater with a rate of 7.5 mL min -1 at an industrially relevant current of 1.0 A over 100 h. More importantly, the energy consumption can be further reduced by coupling more efficient NiMo/NiFe foams (≈6.2 kWh Nm -3 H 2 at 1.0 A), demonstrating the potential to further optimize the continuous DSS electrolyzer for practical applications.
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