Deconvoluting Degradation Mechanisms in Anion Exchange Membrane Water Electrolysis using Operando X-ray Microtomography

07 March 2025, Version 1

Abstract

Anion exchange membrane water electrolysers are held back by the low durability of the ionomer in the membrane and catalyst layers. Studying ionomer degradation in these systems is challenging because the main mechanisms, which result in catalyst detachment, membrane thinning and loss of cationic functionality, have opposing effects on the cell potential; electrochemical measurements alone are therefore insufficient for elucidating the underlying causes. To address this, a bespoke miniature-electrolyser-cell was developed for X-ray microtomography imaging of membrane electrode assemblies at 1.6 μm resolution. This set-up enabled the study of the entire active volume of the electrolyser under static and operando conditions and was validated against standard 5 cm² laboratory cells. An operando investigation of degradation in Fumasep® based catalyst coated membranes revealed both significant membrane thinning and loss of membrane ionic conductivity during stability testing, leading to increased ohmic resistance and cell potential. In contrast, a Selemion™ membrane showed minimal changes in thickness and conductivity and was significantly more stable compared to Fumasep® when exposed to synchrotron radiation. This platform has relevance for operando studies of electrochemical materials and devices generally, including proton exchange membrane electrolysers, fuel cells and CO2 electrolysers using both lab-based and synchrotron X-ray sources.

Keywords

catalyst coated membrane
CCM
AEM
electrolyzer
hydrogen
x-ray
tomography
degradation

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