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Impact of an Electrode-diaphragm Gap on Diffusive Hydrogen Crossover in Alkaline Water Electrolysis

Abstract

Hydrogen crossover limits the load range of alkaline water electrolyzers, hindering their integration with renewable energy. This study examines the impact of the electrode-diaphragm gap on crossover, focusing on diffusive transport. Both finite-gap and zero-gap designs employing the state-of-the-art Zirfon UTP Perl 500 and UTP 220 diaphragms were investigated at room temperature and with a 12 wt% KOH electrolyte. Experimental results reveal a relatively high crossover for a zero-gap configuration, which corresponds to supersaturation levels at the diaphragm-electrolyte interface of 8–80, with significant fluctuations over time and between experiments due to an imperfect zero-gap design. In contrast, a finite-gap (500 μm) has a significantly smaller crossover, corresponding to supersaturation levels of 2–4. Introducing a cathode gap strongly decreases crossover, unlike an anode gap. Our results suggest that adding a small cathode-gap can significantly decrease gas impurity, potentially increase the operating range of alkaline electrolyzers, while maintaining good efficiency.

Funding source: The authors thankfully acknowledge the Topsector Energie funding by the Netherlands Enterprise Agency (project TWAS118004).
Related subjects: Production & Supply Chain
Countries: Netherlands
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/content/journal6601
2023-10-25
2025-04-14
/content/journal6601
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