Publication | Open Access
Energy-saving hydrogen production by chlorine-free hybrid seawater splitting coupling hydrazine degradation
537
Citations
45
References
2021
Year
Seawater electrolysis represents a potential solution to grid-scale production of carbon-neutral hydrogen energy without reliance on freshwater. However, it is challenged by high energy costs and detrimental chlorine chemistry in complex chemical environments. Here we demonstrate chlorine-free hydrogen production by hybrid seawater splitting coupling hydrazine degradation. It yields hydrogen at a rate of 9.2 mol h<sup>-1</sup> g<sub>cat</sub><sup>-1</sup> on NiCo/MXene-based electrodes with a low electricity expense of 2.75 kWh per m<sup>3</sup> H<sub>2</sub> at 500 mA cm<sup>-2</sup> and 48% lower energy equivalent input relative to commercial alkaline water electrolysis. Chlorine electrochemistry is avoided by low cell voltages without anode protection regardless Cl<sup>-</sup> crossover. This electrolyzer meanwhile enables fast hydrazine degradation to ~3 ppb residual. Self-powered hybrid seawater electrolysis is realized by integrating low-voltage direct hydrazine fuel cells or solar cells. These findings enable further opportunities for efficient conversion of ocean resources to hydrogen fuel while removing harmful pollutants.
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