Publication | Open Access
Exploring the Interface of Skin‐Layered Titanium Fibers for Electrochemical Water Splitting
137
Citations
41
References
2021
Year
EngineeringWater ElectrolyzersChemistryChemical EngineeringAbstract Water ElectrolysisElectrochemical InterfaceInterfacial ChemistryMaterials ScienceElectroactive MaterialElectrochemical WaterBattery Electrode MaterialsEnergy StorageElectrochemistrySkin‐layered Titanium FibersNanofiberNatural SciencesInterfacial PhenomenaWater ElectrolysisIridium Oxide StabilityElectrolysis Of Water
Abstract Water electrolysis is the key to a decarbonized energy system, as it enables the conversion and storage of renewably generated intermittent electricity in the form of hydrogen. However, reliability challenges arising from titanium‐based porous transport layers (PTLs) have hitherto restricted the deployment of next‐generation water‐splitting devices. Here, it is shown for the first time how PTLs can be adapted so that their interface remains well protected and resistant to corrosion across ≈4000 h under real electrolysis conditions. It is also demonstrated that the malfunctioning of unprotected PTLs is a result triggered by additional fatal degradation mechanisms over the anodic catalyst layer beyond the impacts expected from iridium oxide stability. Now, superior durability and efficiency in water electrolyzers can be achieved over extended periods of operation with less‐expensive PTLs with proper protection, which can be explained by the detailed reconstruction of the interface between the different elements, materials, layers, and components presented in this work.
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