Title: Electrolysis
1Electrolysis
- Amy Jewel, Rob Larkin and Todd Haurin
Water will be the coal of the future. -
Jules Verne, 1874
2The process
of hair removal
3Is NOT our topic today!
4What is electrolysis?
- Definition of Electrolysis
- ? A chemical process in which bonded
elements and compounds are dissociated by
the passage of an electric current. - The electrolysis of water
- ? 2H2O energy 2H2 2O2
5A Basic Electrolyzer
- Two electrodes
- Cathode (negatively charged)
- Anode (positively charged)
- An Electrolyte
- External circuit
- Diaphragm
6Polymer Electrolyte Membrane (PEM) Electrolyzers
- Uses a solid plastic material as an electrolyte.
- 2. Water reacts at the anode to form oxygen,
electrons, and positively charged hydrogen ions
(protons).
7Polymer Electrolyte Membrane (PEM) Electrolyzers
3. The electrons flow through an external circuit
to the cathode. 4. The hydrogen ions move across
the PEM to the cathode, where they combine with
the electrons to form hydrogen gas
8Alkaline Electrolyzers
- Similar to PEM electrolyzers, except that they
use an alkaline solution as an electrolyte. - Usually this solution is sodium hydroxide or
potassium hydroxide.
- This type of electrolyzer has been in use
commercially for several decades
9Solid Oxide Electrolyzers
- A solid ceramic material is used as the
electrolyte. - At the cathode, water combines with electrons
from the external circuit to produce hydrogen gas
and negatively charged oxygen ions. - The oxygen ions move through the solid oxide
membrane and release electrons to the external
circuit. - In order for this type of electolyzer to
function properly, the solid oxide membrane must
be between 500 800 degrees Celsius, which is
much higher than the temperatures required by the
other electrolyzers
10Energy Balance and Efficiency of Electrolysis
- The electricity needed for hydrogen
- production by electrolysis can currently be
- generated by a variety of sources,
- including
- fossil fuels
- wind power
- photovoltaic cells
- hydropower
11Necessary Water Inputs For Electrolysis
- Amount of water needed to meet average US
persons energy demand though electrolysis 3,000
liters of water per year - Amount of water currently used by an average US
person for indoor residential purposes 138,770
liters a year
12Electrolysis Efficiency Basics
- Although hydrogen is a promising alternative
fuel, hydrogen production by electrolysis is not
extremely efficient. - The primary energy inputs to be considered are
the energy requirements for building and running
an electrical generating facility.
13Energy Balance - Part I
- An input of 1.4 billion kW per hour of
electricity is required to produce 1 billion kW
per hour of hydrogen by electrolysis. - Energy balance (Useful Energy Output)/(Energy
Input) - (1 kW/hr electricity)/(1.4 kW/hr hydrogen
energy) - 0.71, or 71 efficiency for the initial
electrolysis process.
14Energy Balance - Part II
- The other main process to consider in production
of hydrogen gas is the necessary cooling of
hydrogen to about minus 253 degrees Celsius. - This process demands considerable energy,
resulting in a loss of approximately 30 percent
of the hydrogen energy. - As a result of each stage of the hydrogen
production process, the total production
efficiency is approximately 30 .
15High Temperature Electrolysis
- Process which could increase hydrogen efficiency
to the range of 45 to 50 - The DOE is currently examining the use of high
temperature electrolysis powered by fossil fuel,
renewable, and even nuclear technologies. - High temperature electrolysis utilizes the solid
oxide electrolyzer described earlier.
16High Temperature Electrolysis
- The efficiency increase is achieved because high
temperature electrolysis utilizes a significant
amount of heat, for example from a nuclear
reactor. - The added heat decreases the amount of
electricity required to separate the water into
hydrogen and oxygen.Â
17Photoelectrolysis
- Photoelectrolysis Clean and renewable means of
- deriving hydrogen Also known as Water Splitting
- (2 processes)
- Conversion of solar radiation to electricity in
photovoltaic cells - Electrolysis of water in a separate cell
- Conversion efficiency 3 - 32
18Photoelectrolysis
- However, the 2 processes can be combined in
- a single nanoscale process Photon
- absorption creates a local electron-hole pair
- that electrochemically splits a neighboring
- water molecule. In theory, rather than 2
- sequential process, the combination can allow
- for greater overall efficiency,
19Photoelectrolysis
- Challenges Finding a robust semiconductor to
satisfy the competing requirements of nature.
Solar photons are primarily visible light, a
wavelength that requires semiconductors that
require small bandgaps lt 1.7 eV - for efficient
absorption.
20Photoelectrolysis
- Possible solution Oxide based conductors -
Titanium oxide - Advantage robust in aqueous environments but
have - Disadvantage - wide bandgaps 3.0 eV
21Photoelectrolysis
- Dye-sensitized photocells
- accumulate energy from multiple low-energy
photons to inject higher-energy electrons into
the semiconductor a promising direction for
matching the solar spectrum.
22Other Applications of Electrolysis
23Other Applications of Electrolysis
24Other Applications of Electrolysis