Scalable Synthesis of TiO2@IrOx Core-Shell Catalyst for Proton Exchange Membrane Water Electrolysis with Low Iridium Loading

13 March 2024, Version 1

Abstract

The widespread application of green hydrogen production technologies requires cost reduction of crucial elements. To achieve this, a viable pathway to reduce the iridium loading in proton exchange membrane water electrolysis (PEMWE) is explored. Herein, we present a scalable synthesis method based on a photodeposition process for a TiO2@IrOx core-shell catalyst with a reduced iridium content as low as 40 wt%. Using this synthesis route, we obtain titania support particles homogeneously coated with a thin iridium oxide shell of only 2.1 ± 0.4 nm. The catalyst exhibits not only high ex situ activity, but also decent stability compared to commercially available catalysts. Furthermore, the unique core-shell structure provides a threefold increased electrical powder conductivity compared to structures without the shell. In addition, the low iridium content facilitates the fabrication of sufficiently thick catalyst layers at decreased iridium loadings mitigating the impact of crack formation in the catalyst layer during PEMWE operation. We demonstrate that the novel TiO2@IrOx core-shell catalyst clearly outperforms the commercial reference in single-cell tests with an iridium loading below 0.3 mgIr cm 2 exhibiting a superior iridium-specific power density of 17.9 kW gIr-1 compared to 10.4 kW gIr-1 for the commercial reference.

Keywords

Hydrogen
Electrolysis
PEM
Iridium
Core-Shell
Photodeposition

Supplementary materials

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TiO2@IrOx_core-shell_ESI
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Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available: Detailed experimental procedures (catalyst-coated membrane fabrication, transmission electron microscopy, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction, powder conductivity, N2-physisorption, nuclear magnetic resonance, nano X-ray computed tomography, Focused ion beam scanning electron microscopy, SEM cross-sectional imaging, electronic in-plane conductivity, rotating disk electrode, scanning flow cell coupled to an inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometer), tips for reproducing the photodeposition synthesis, stability testing of the TiO2@IrOx catalyst, Figures S1-S15 and Tables S1 and S2.
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V.3_nano-CT 3D visualization
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V.3_nano-CT 3D visualization
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V.1_HRES PC tilt series
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V.1_HRES PC tilt series
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V.2_HRES PC reconstructed slices
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V.2_HRES PC reconstructed slices
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V.4_MSI video
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V.4_MSI video
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