Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
3D Multilayered DDM-Modified Nickel Foam Electrode for Advanced Alkaline Water Electrolysis.
- Year:
- 2025
- Authors:
- Petkucheva E et al.
- Affiliation:
- Acad. Evgeni Budevski Institute of Electrochemistry and Energy Systems Bulgarian Academy of Sciences (IEES-BAS)
- Species:
- cat
Abstract
Advanced alkaline water electrolysis (AWE) in "zero-gap" configuration is a promising approach for low-temperature hydrogen production, but its efficiency strongly depends on the design and surface chemistry of nickel-based electrodes. Here, we present a simple dip-and-drying method (DDM) to modify commercial nickel foam with a Ni-FeOOH/PTFE microporous catalytic layer and evaluate its electrochemical performance in 1 M KOH and in a laboratory zero-gap cell with a Zirfon<sup>®</sup> Perl 500 UTP diaphragm, through circulating 25 wt.% KOH. The FeSO<sub>4</sub>-assisted DDM treatment generates mixed Ni-Fe oxyhydroxide surface species, while PTFE imparts control hydrophobicity, enhancing both catalytic activity and gas-release behavior. Annealing the electrode (DDM-NF-CAT-A) results in a cell voltage of 2.45 V at 1 A·cm<sup>-2</sup> and 80 °C, demonstrating moderate performance comparable to other Ni-based electrodes prepared via low-complexity methods, though below that of optimized state-of-the-art zero-gap systems. Short-term durability tests (80 h at 0.5 A·cm<sup>-2</sup>) indicate stable operation, but long-term industrial performance was not assessed. These findings illustrate the potential of the DDM approach as a simple, low-cost route to structured nickel foam electrodes and provide a foundation for further optimization of catalyst loading, microstructure, and long-term stability for practical AWE applications.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://europepmc.org/article/MED/41515364