The Gas Diffusion Electrode Setup as Straightforward Testing Device for Proton Exchange Membrane Water Electrolyzer Catalysts
Hydrogen production from renewable resources and its reconversion into electricity are two important pillars toward a more sustainable energy use. The efficiency and viability of these technologies heavily rely on active and stable electrocatalysts. Basic research to develop superior electrocatalyst...
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Veröffentlicht in: | JACS Au 2021-03, Vol.1 (3), p.247-251 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Hydrogen production
from renewable resources and its reconversion
into electricity are two important pillars toward a more sustainable
energy use. The efficiency and viability of these technologies heavily
rely on active and stable electrocatalysts. Basic research to develop
superior electrocatalysts is commonly performed in conventional electrochemical
setups such as a rotating disk electrode (RDE) configuration or H-type
electrochemical cells. These experiments are easy to set up; however,
there is a large gap to real electrochemical conversion devices such
as fuel cells or electrolyzers. To close this gap, gas diffusion electrode
(GDE) setups were recently presented as a straightforward technique
for testing fuel cell catalysts under more realistic conditions. Here,
we demonstrate for the first time a GDE setup for measuring the oxygen
evolution reaction (OER) of catalysts for proton exchange membrane
water electrolyzers (PEMWEs). Using a commercially available benchmark
IrO
2
catalyst deposited on a carbon gas diffusion layer
(GDL), it is shown that key parameters such as the OER mass activity,
the activation energy, and even reasonable estimates of the exchange
current density can be extracted in a realistic range of catalyst
loadings for PEMWEs. It is furthermore shown that the carbon-based
GDL is not only suitable for activity determination but also short-term
stability testing. Alternatively, the GDL can be replaced by Ti-based
porous transport layers (PTLs) typically used in commercial PEMWEs.
Here a simple preparation is shown involving the hot-pressing of a
Nafion membrane onto a drop-cast glycerol-based ink on a Ti-PTL. |
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ISSN: | 2691-3704 2691-3704 |
DOI: | 10.1021/jacsau.1c00015 |