Decoupled catalytic hydrogen evolution from a molecular metal oxide redox mediator in water splitting
- PMID: 25214625
- DOI: 10.1126/science.1257443
Decoupled catalytic hydrogen evolution from a molecular metal oxide redox mediator in water splitting
Abstract
The electrolysis of water using renewable energy inputs is being actively pursued as a route to sustainable hydrogen production. Here we introduce a recyclable redox mediator (silicotungstic acid) that enables the coupling of low-pressure production of oxygen via water oxidation to a separate, catalytic hydrogen production step outside the electrolyzer that requires no post-electrolysis energy input. This approach sidesteps the production of high-pressure gases inside the electrolytic cell (a major cause of membrane degradation) and essentially eliminates the hazardous issue of product gas crossover at the low current densities that characterize renewables-driven water-splitting devices. We demonstrated that a platinum-catalyzed system can produce pure hydrogen over 30 times faster than state-of-the-art proton exchange membrane electrolyzers at equivalent platinum loading.
Copyright © 2014, American Association for the Advancement of Science.
Publication types
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources