Water electrolysis: from textbook knowledge to the latest scientific strategies and industrial developments

Marian Chatenet(Institut polytechnique de Grenoble), Bruno G. Pollet(Norwegian University of Science and Technology), Dario R. Dekel(Technion – Israel Institute of Technology), Fabio Dionigi(Technische Universität Berlin), Jonathan Deseure(Institut polytechnique de Grenoble), Pierre Millet(Université Paris-Saclay), Richard D. Braatz(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Martin Z. Bazant(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Michael Eikerling(Forschungszentrum Jülich), Iain Staffell(Imperial College London), Paul Balcombe(Queen Mary University of London), Yang Shao‐Horn(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Helmut Schäfer(Osnabrück University)
Chemical Society Reviews
January 1, 2022
Cited by 1,768Open Access
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Abstract

footprint. The viability of water electrolysis still hinges on the availability of durable earth-abundant electrocatalyst materials and the overall process efficiency. This review spans from the fundamentals of electrocatalytically initiated water splitting to the very latest scientific findings from university and institutional research, also covering specifications and special features of the current industrial processes and those processes currently being tested in large-scale applications. Recently developed strategies are described for the optimisation and discovery of active and durable materials for electrodes that ever-increasingly harness first-principles calculations and machine learning. In addition, a technoeconomic analysis of water electrolysis is included that allows an assessment of the extent to which a large-scale implementation of water splitting can help to combat climate change. This review article is intended to cross-pollinate and strengthen efforts from fundamental understanding to technical implementation and to improve the 'junctions' between the field's physical chemists, materials scientists and engineers, as well as stimulate much-needed exchange among these groups on challenges encountered in the different domains.


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