Title: Electrolysis
1Electrolysis
General RD Needs
Renewable Energy H2O
Intermittent Base load Geothermal
- Commercial Large and Small plants
- alkaline systems and PEM
- RDD Components
- PEM and high temperature electrolysis to increase
efficiency - High cost today
- Engineered systems for lower cost
- Engineered electrolysis/renewable
energyproduction systems - Materials issues, more at high temperature
Hydrogen
2High(er) Temperature Electrolysis
Only makes sense if.
- The heat is free and it takes a minimum amount of
energy to move it were you want to use it. - Ability to use materials with better properties.
- Catalysts properties are greatly improved
enhanced kinetics, lower overvoltages. - Membranes with higher conductivity.
- Lower cost electrodes with longer lifetimes.
3Reversible PEM Fuel Cell Electrolyzer and Fuel
Cell Combined
- Concept is great, but the materials issues are
different. - Carbon is OK as a catalyst support for a fuel
cell, but cannot be used on the oxygen evolving
side of the of the electolyzer (CO2). - For the best efficiency, the catalysts are
different Pt vs. Ir and Ru. - Electrodes are different C or SS vs. Ti
- Likely to always be a higher cost, lower
efficiency option.
4Photolysis - Water Splitting with visible light
RD Needs
Renewable Energy H2O
Longer term RD Issues Materials fundamental
understanding algal/bacterial/photoand chemical
systems, hydrogen containment, engineering
researchfor photoreactors. Maintain awareness of
economicsand life cycle
Hydrogen
5Band Edges of p- and n-TypeSemiconductors
Immersed in Aqueous Electrolytes to Form Liquid
Junctions
E
conduction
p-type
O
2H
O
2e
2OH
H
2
2
2
E
valence
E
conduction
H
H
O
2h
2H
1/2 O
n-type
2
2
2
E
valence
6Technical Challenges (the big three)Material
Characteristics for Photoelectrochemical Hydrogen
Production
Electron Energy
- Material Durability semiconductor must be
stable in aqueous solution - Efficiency the band gap (Eg) must be at least
1.6-1.7 eV, but not over 2.2 eV - Energetics the band edges must straddle H2O
redox potentials (Grand Challenge)
H2O/H2
E
g
1.23 eV
1.6-1.7 eV
Counter Electrode
H2O/O2
p-type Semiconductor
All must be satisfied simultaneously
i
7Bandedge Energetic ConsiderationsOxides
T. Bak, J. Nowotny, M. Rekas, C.C. Sorrell,
International Journal of Hydrogen Energy 27
(2002) 991 1022
8 Gallium Indium Phosphide/Electrolyte System
Understanding semiconductor/electrolyte junctions
(-)
Eg 1.83 eV
E
CB
Energy
Band edges are 0.2-0.4 V too negative
p-GaInP
2
H2O/H2
Band edges are pH sensitive
E
F
E
VB
()
H2O/O2
9Technical ChallengesEnergetics
- Grand Challenge
- Understanding the interface and its influence on
the energetics of the semiconductor bandedges and
on the electron/hole charge transfer processes. - The Semiconductor/Electrolyte Interphase
- In contrast to metal electrodes, semiconductor
electrodes in contact with liquid electrolytes
have fixed energies where the charge carriers
enter the solution. So even though a
semiconductor electrode may generate sufficient
energy to effect an electrochemical reaction, the
energetic position of the band edges may prevent
it from doing so. For spontaneous water
splitting, the oxygen and hydrogen reactions must
lie between the valence and conduction band
edges, and this is almost never the case.
10Technical Challenges (Cont.)
- Catalysts
- Oxygen (most important -- highest energy loss).
- Hydrogen
- Transparency might be necessary
- Non-precious metal (lower current density!)
- Band edge engineering
- Semiconductor hybrid designs
- Low cost system designs featuring passive controls
11High-Throughput Discovery of New and Optimized
Metal Oxide Photocatalysts Eric W. McFarland
(PI), Tom Jaramillo, Sung-Hyeon Baeck, Alan
KleinmanDept. of Chemical Engineering,
University of California, Santa Barbara
Tungsten-Molybdenum Mixed Oxides