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10,000-h-stable intermittent alkaline seawater electrolysis

Author

Listed:
  • Qihao Sha

    (Beijing University of Chemical Technology)

  • Shiyuan Wang

    (Beijing University of Chemical Technology
    State Power Investment Corporation Hydrogen Energy Tech Co., Ltd.)

  • Li Yan

    (Beijing University of Chemical Technology)

  • Yisui Feng

    (Beijing University of Chemical Technology)

  • Zhuang Zhang

    (Beijing University of Chemical Technology)

  • Shihang Li

    (Beijing University of Chemical Technology)

  • Xinlong Guo

    (Beijing University of Chemical Technology)

  • Tianshui Li

    (Beijing University of Chemical Technology)

  • Hui Li

    (Beijing University of Chemical Technology)

  • Zhongbin Zhuang

    (Beijing University of Chemical Technology)

  • Daojin Zhou

    (Beijing University of Chemical Technology)

  • Bin Liu

    (City University of Hong Kong
    City University of Hong Kong)

  • Xiaoming Sun

    (Beijing University of Chemical Technology)

Abstract

Seawater electrolysis powered by renewable electricity provides an attractive strategy for producing green hydrogen1–5. However, direct seawater electrolysis faces many challenges, primarily arising from corrosion and competing reactions at the anode caused by the abundance of halide ions (Cl−, Br−) in seawater6. Previous studies3,6–14 on seawater electrolysis have mainly focused on the anode development, because the cathode operates at reducing potentials, which is not subject to electrode dissolution or chloride corrosion reactions during seawater electrolysis11,15. However, renewable energy sources are intermittent, variable and random, which cause frequent start–shutdown operations if renewable electricity is used to drive seawater electrolysis. Here we first unveil dynamic evolution and degradation of seawater splitting cathode in intermittent electrolysis and, accordingly, propose construction of a catalyst’s passivation layer to maintain the hydrogen evolution performance during operation. An in situ-formed phosphate passivation layer on the surface of NiCoP–Cr2O3 cathode can effectively protect metal active sites against oxidation during frequent discharge processes and repel halide ion adsorption on the cathode during shutdown conditions. We demonstrate that electrodes optimized using this design strategy can withstand fluctuating operation at 0.5 A cm−2 for 10,000 h in alkaline seawater, with a voltage increase rate of only 0.5% khr−1. The newly discovered challenge and our proposed strategy herein offer new insights to facilitate the development of practical seawater splitting technologies powered by renewable electricity.

Suggested Citation

  • Qihao Sha & Shiyuan Wang & Li Yan & Yisui Feng & Zhuang Zhang & Shihang Li & Xinlong Guo & Tianshui Li & Hui Li & Zhongbin Zhuang & Daojin Zhou & Bin Liu & Xiaoming Sun, 2025. "10,000-h-stable intermittent alkaline seawater electrolysis," Nature, Nature, vol. 639(8054), pages 360-367, March.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:nature:v:639:y:2025:i:8054:d:10.1038_s41586-025-08610-1
    DOI: 10.1038/s41586-025-08610-1
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