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Factors in the utilization of corrosive ruthenium in the oxygen evolution electrode of polymer electrolyte membrane water electrolysisopen access

Authors
Lee, SujiYang, ChaeyeonChoi, JihyunJang, Jong HyunJin, HaneulSung, Yung-EunPark, Hyun S.
Issue Date
Jun-2025
Publisher
Royal Society of Chemistry
Keywords
'current; Device Operations; Hydrogen Production Costs; Oxygen Evolution; Performance; Polymer Electrolyte Membranes; Porous Transport Layers; Thermal; Water Electrolysis; ]+ Catalyst; Polymer Membrane Electrodes
Citation
Journal of Materials Chemistry A, v.13, no.24, pp 18327 - 18337
Pages
11
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Journal of Materials Chemistry A
Volume
13
Number
24
Start Page
18327
End Page
18337
URI
https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/58265
DOI
10.1039/d5ta01168j
ISSN
2050-7488
2050-7496
Abstract
The use of non-Pt materials in polymer electrolyte membrane water electrolysis (PEMWE) anodes is imperative to reduce green hydrogen production costs. Ru provides sufficient electrical and thermal conductivity, but rapidly over-oxidizes to RuO42- or H2RuO5 during PEMWE device operation. Therefore, this study involved using corrosive Ru instead of expensive Pt to form an interlayer between a Ti porous transport layer and the IrOx catalyst in PEMWE anodes, while enhancing the water-oxidation-catalyzing ability of IrOx. The optimized Ru-containing anode was comparable to the Pt-containing equivalent in OER performance (5.5 A cm(-2) at 2.0 V-Cell; similar to 80 mu g cm(-2) of Ir). Importantly, the Ru in the PEMWE anode functioned stably for >250 h at a practical current density (2.0 A cm(-2)) during current swing operation. Consequently, the Ru-interlayer-based device was comparable to the conventional Pt-interlayer-based counterpart in performance and durability. The relationship between Ru dissolution and local oxygen accumulation at electrode surfaces was clarified.
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