Author:
Kuang Yun,Kenney Michael J.,Meng Yongtao,Hung Wei-Hsuan,Liu Yijin,Huang Jianan Erick,Prasanna Rohit,Li Pengsong,Li Yaping,Wang Lei,Lin Meng-Chang,McGehee Michael D.,Sun Xiaoming,Dai Hongjie
Abstract
Electrolysis of water to generate hydrogen fuel is an attractive renewable energy storage technology. However, grid-scale freshwater electrolysis would put a heavy strain on vital water resources. Developing cheap electrocatalysts and electrodes that can sustain seawater splitting without chloride corrosion could address the water scarcity issue. Here we present a multilayer anode consisting of a nickel–iron hydroxide (NiFe) electrocatalyst layer uniformly coated on a nickel sulfide (NiSx) layer formed on porous Ni foam (NiFe/NiSx-Ni), affording superior catalytic activity and corrosion resistance in solar-driven alkaline seawater electrolysis operating at industrially required current densities (0.4 to 1 A/cm2) over 1,000 h. A continuous, highly oxygen evolution reaction-active NiFe electrocatalyst layer drawing anodic currents toward water oxidation and an in situ-generated polyatomic sulfate and carbonate-rich passivating layers formed in the anode are responsible for chloride repelling and superior corrosion resistance of the salty-water-splitting anode.
Funder
U.S. Department of Energy
National Science Foundation
National Key Research and Development Project
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Cited by
618 articles.
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