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Highly efficient conversion of surplus electricity to hydrogen energy via polysulfides redox

Mo Zhang, Jing Guan, Yunchuan Tu, Su-Heng Wang, Dehui Deng

2021The Innovation35 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

•A high-performance device of decoupled water electrolysis is constructed by using polysulfides as mediators and graphene-encapsulated CoNi as catalysts, which provides a new strategy to distribute the electricity reasonably by peak shaving and valley filling•The potential of H2 production only needs 0.82 V at 100 mA/cm2 current density, which saves 60.2% more energy than direct electrolysis of water•The capacity of the electrolyzer to produce voluminous hydrogen reaches 2.5 × 105 mAh/cm2 in a single pass, which is the highest capacity reported so far•The device exhibits superior cyclicity in 15-days periodic recycle tests without any decay of performance Decoupled electrolysis of water is a promising strategy for peak load regulation of electricity. The key to developing this technology is to construct decoupled devices containing stable redox mediators and corresponding efficient catalysts, which remains a considerable challenge. Herein, we designed a high-performance device, using polysulfides as mediators and graphene-encapsulated CoNi as catalysts. It produced H2 with a low potential of 0.82 V at 100 mA/cm2, saving 60.2% more energy than direct water electrolysis. The capacity of H2 production reached 2.5×105 mAh/cm2, which is the highest capacity reported so far. This device exhibited excellent cyclability in 15-day recycle tests, without any decay of performance. The calculation results revealed that the electronic structure of the graphene shell was modulated by the electron transfer from N-dopant and metal core, which significantly facilitated recycle of polysulfides on graphene surfaces. This study provides a promising method for constructing a smart grid by developing efficient decoupled devices. Decoupled electrolysis of water is a promising strategy for peak load regulation of electricity. The key to developing this technology is to construct decoupled devices containing stable redox mediators and corresponding efficient catalysts, which remains a considerable challenge. Herein, we designed a high-performance device, using polysulfides as mediators and graphene-encapsulated CoNi as catalysts. It produced H2 with a low potential of 0.82 V at 100 mA/cm2, saving 60.2% more energy than direct water electrolysis. The capacity of H2 production reached 2.5×105 mAh/cm2, which is the highest capacity reported so far. This device exhibited excellent cyclability in 15-day recycle tests, without any decay of performance. The calculation results revealed that the electronic structure of the graphene shell was modulated by the electron transfer from N-dopant and metal core, which significantly facilitated recycle of polysulfides on graphene surfaces. This study provides a promising method for constructing a smart grid by developing efficient decoupled devices.

Topics & Concepts

GrapheneRedoxElectrolysisHydrogen productionCatalysisElectron transferMaterials scienceElectrolysis of waterChemical engineeringDopantNanotechnologyChemistryElectrodePhotochemistryDopingOptoelectronicsMetallurgyElectrolytePhysical chemistryBiochemistryEngineeringAdvanced battery technologies researchElectrocatalysts for Energy ConversionAdvanced Photocatalysis Techniques
Highly efficient conversion of surplus electricity to hydrogen energy via polysulfides redox | Litcius