December 28, 2023
By
National Research Council of Science and
Technology
Developing nanocatalysts to overcome limitations of water electrolysis
technology
Manufacturing process and evaluation results of
high temperature water electrolysis cell with nanomaterials.
Credit: Korea Institute of Science and Technology (KIST)
Green hydrogen can be
produced through water electrolysis technology, which uses renewable
energy to split water into hydrogen and oxygen without emitting carbon
dioxide. However, the production cost of green hydrogen is currently
around $5 per kilogram, which is two to three times higher than gray
hydrogen obtained from natural gas.
For the practical use of green hydrogen, innovation in water
electrolysis technology is required for the realization of hydrogen
economy, especially for Korea where the utilization of renewable
energy is limited owing to geographical reasons.
Dr. Kyung Joong Yoon's research team at the Energy Materials Research
Center of the Korea Institute of Science and Technology (KIST) has
developed a nanocatalyst for high-temperature water electrolysis that
can retain a high current density of more than 1A/cm2 for a long
period of time at temperatures above 600°. The work is published in
the Chemical Engineering Journal.
While the degradation mechanisms of nanomaterials at high temperatures
have been elusive thus far, the team identified the fundamental
reasons of abnormal behavior of nanomateirals and successfully
resolved issues, eventually improving performance and stability in
realistic water electrolysis cells.
The electrolysis technology can be classified into low- and
high-temperature electrolysis. While low-temperature electrolysis
operating at temperatures below 100° Celsius has long been developed
and is technologically more mature, high-temperature electrolysis
operating above 600° Celsius offers higher efficiency and is
considered as a next-generation technology with a strong potential for
further cost-down.
However, its commercialization has been hindered by the lack of
thermal stability and insufficient lifetime owing to high-temperature
degradation, such as corrosion and structural deformation. In
particular, nanocatalysts, which are widely used to improve the
performance of low-temperature water electrolyzers, quickly
deteriorate at high operating temperatures, making it difficult to
effectively use them for high-temperature water electrolysis.
To overcome this limitation, the team developed a new nanocatalyst
synthetic technique that suppresses the formation of harmful compounds
causing high temperature degradation.
By systematically analyzing the nanoscale phenomena using transmission
electron microscopy, the researchers identified specific substances
causing severe structural alterations, such as strontium carbonate and
cobalt oxide and successfully removed them to achieve highly stable
nanocatalysts, in terms of chemical and physical properties.
When the team applied the nanocatalyst to a high-temperature water
electrolysis cell, it more than doubled hydrogen production rate and
operated for more than 400 hours at 650° without degradation. This
technique was also successfully applied to a practical large-area
water electrolysis cell, confirming its strong potential for scale-up
and commercial use.
"Our newly-developed nanomaterials achieved both high performance and
stability for high-temperature water electrolysis technology, and it
can contribute to lower the production cost of green hydrogen, making
it economically competitive with gray hydrogen in the future," said
Dr. Kyungjoong Yoon of KIST.
"For commercialization, we plan to develop automated processing
techniques for mass production in cooperation with industry cell
manufacturers."
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