Zephyrnet Logo

Development of cost-efficient electrocatalyst for hydrogen production: Development of a highly efficient and durable electrocatalyst for water electrolysis that will lead to cost-efficient hydrogen production. Trace amounts of titanium doping on low-cost molybdenum phosphide resu

Date:

Home > Press > Development of cost-efficient electrocatalyst for hydrogen production: Development of a highly efficient and durable electrocatalyst for water electrolysis that will lead to cost-efficient hydrogen production. Trace amounts of titanium doping on low-cost molybdenum phosphide resu

Schematic diagram of the step-by-step synthesis process for the preparation of Ti.MoP. CREDIT
Korea Institue of Science and Technology(KIST)
Schematic diagram of the step-by-step synthesis process for the preparation of Ti.MoP. CREDIT
Korea Institue of Science and Technology(KIST)

Abstract:
The key to promoting the hydrogen economy represented by hydrogen vehicles is to produce hydrogen for electricity generation at an affordable price. Hydrogen production methods include capturing by-product hydrogen, reforming fossil fuel, and electrolyzing water. Water electrolysis in particular is an eco-friendly method of producing hydrogen, in which the use of a catalyst is the most important factor in determining the efficiency and price competitiveness. However, water electrolysis devices require a platinum (Pt) catalyst, which exhibits unparalleled performance when it comes to speeding up the hydrogen generation reaction and enhancing long-term durability but is high in cost, making it less competitive compared to other methods price-wise.

Development of cost-efficient electrocatalyst for hydrogen production: Development of a highly efficient and durable electrocatalyst for water electrolysis that will lead to cost-efficient hydrogen production. Trace amounts of titanium doping on low-cost molybdenum phosphide resu


Sejong, Korea | Posted on October 9th, 2020

There are water electrolysis devices that vary in terms of the electrolyte that dissolves in water and allows current to flow. A device that uses a proton exchange membrane (PEM), for instance, exhibits a high rate of hydrogen generation reaction even with the use of a catalyst made of a transition metal instead of an expensive Pt-based catalyst. For this reason, there has been a great deal of research on the technology for commercialization purposes. While research has been focused on achieving high reaction activity, research on increasing the durability of transition metals that easily corrode in an electrochemical environment has been relatively neglected.

The Korea Institute of Science and Technology (KIST) announced that a team headed by Dr. Sung-Jong Yoo from the Center for Hydrogen-Fuel Cell Research developed a catalyst made of a transition metal with long-term stability that could improve hydrogen production efficiency without the use of platinum by overcoming the durability issue of non-platinum catalysts.

The research team injected a small amount of titanium (Ti) into molybdenum phosphide (MoP), a low-cost transition metal, through a spray pyrolysis process. Because it is inexpensive and relatively easy to handle, molybdenum is used as a catalyst for energy conversion and storage devices, but its weakness includes the fact that it corrodes easily as it is vulnerable to oxidation.

In the case of the catalyst developed by the research team at KIST, it was found that the electronic structure of each material became completely restructured during the synthesis process, and it resulted in the same level of hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) activity as the platinum catalyst. The changes in the electronic structure addressed the issue of high corrosiveness, thereby improving durability by 26 times compared to existing transition metal-based catalysts. This is expected to greatly accelerate the commercialization of non-platinum catalysts.

Dr. Yoo of KIST said, “This study is significant in that it improved the stability of a transition metal catalyst-based water electrolysis system, which had been its biggest limitation. I hope that this study, which boosted the hydrogen evolution reaction efficiency of the transition metal catalyst to the level of platinum catalysts and at the same time improved the stability will contribute to earlier commercialization of eco-friendly hydrogen energy production technology.”

###

This study was carried out with a grant from the Ministry of Science and ICT (MSIT), as part of the Institutional R&D Program of KIST, the Technical Development Program for Responding to Climate Change, and the Global Frontier Multi-Scale Energy System Research Program. It was published in the latest edition of Nano Energy (IF: 16.602, Top 4.299% in the field of JCR), a leading international journal in the area of energy and nanotechnology.

####

For more information, please click here

Contacts:
Do-Hyun Kim
82-295-86344

Copyright © National Research Council of Science & Technology(NST)

If you have a comment, please Contact us.

Issuers of news releases, not 7th Wave, Inc. or Nanotechnology Now, are solely responsible for the accuracy of the content.

Bookmark:
Delicious Digg Newsvine Google Yahoo Reddit Magnoliacom Furl Facebook

Related Links

RELATED JOURNAL ARTICLE:

Related News Press

News and information

Surface waves can help nanostructured devices keep their cool October 12th, 2020

Turning a hot spot into a cold spot: Fano-shaped local-field responses probed by a quantum dot October 9th, 2020

Polarimetric parity-time-symmetric photonic system October 9th, 2020

New drug carrier systems: University of Delaware researchers advance drug delivery systems to treat connective tissue disorders October 9th, 2020

Chemistry

High-performance single-atom catalysts for high-temperature fuel cells: Individual Pt atoms participate in catalytic reaction to faciitate the electrode process by up to 10 times. Single-atom Pt catalysts are stable at 700 degrees Celsius and expected to stimulate the commerciali September 25th, 2020

Shape matters for light-activated nanocatalysts – Study: Pointed tips on aluminum ‘octopods’ increase catalytic reactivity September 18th, 2020

Observation charge accumulation at nanocavity on plasmonic photocatalyst August 28th, 2020

Advance in programmable synthetic materials: Reading sequence of metal atoms in MOFs allows encoding of multiple chemical functions August 11th, 2020

Possible Futures

New NIST project to build nano-thermometers could revolutionize temperature imaging: Cheaper refrigerators? Stronger hip implants? A better understanding of human disease? All of these could be possible October 9th, 2020

Graphene microbubbles make perfect lenses: New method generates precisely controlled graphene microbubbles with perfectly spherical curvature for lenses October 9th, 2020

Polarimetric parity-time-symmetric photonic system October 9th, 2020

New drug carrier systems: University of Delaware researchers advance drug delivery systems to treat connective tissue disorders October 9th, 2020

Discoveries

Surface waves can help nanostructured devices keep their cool October 12th, 2020

Turning a hot spot into a cold spot: Fano-shaped local-field responses probed by a quantum dot October 9th, 2020

Polarimetric parity-time-symmetric photonic system October 9th, 2020

New drug carrier systems: University of Delaware researchers advance drug delivery systems to treat connective tissue disorders October 9th, 2020

Materials/Metamaterials

Graphene detector reveals THz light’s polarization October 8th, 2020

Multi-institutional team extracts more energy from sunlight with advanced solar panels October 6th, 2020

The most sensitive and fastest graphene microwave bolometer September 30th, 2020

The ICN2 co-leads a roadmap on quantum materials September 29th, 2020

Announcements

Surface waves can help nanostructured devices keep their cool October 12th, 2020

Turning a hot spot into a cold spot: Fano-shaped local-field responses probed by a quantum dot October 9th, 2020

Polarimetric parity-time-symmetric photonic system October 9th, 2020

New drug carrier systems: University of Delaware researchers advance drug delivery systems to treat connective tissue disorders October 9th, 2020

Interviews/Book Reviews/Essays/Reports/Podcasts/Journals/White papers/Posters

Surface waves can help nanostructured devices keep their cool October 12th, 2020

New NIST project to build nano-thermometers could revolutionize temperature imaging: Cheaper refrigerators? Stronger hip implants? A better understanding of human disease? All of these could be possible October 9th, 2020

Turning a hot spot into a cold spot: Fano-shaped local-field responses probed by a quantum dot October 9th, 2020

Polarimetric parity-time-symmetric photonic system October 9th, 2020

Energy

Multi-institutional team extracts more energy from sunlight with advanced solar panels October 6th, 2020

New design principles for spin-based quantum materials: Criteria for designing targeted quantum materials could support Internet of Things devices and other resource-intensive technologies September 20th, 2020

Shedding Light on the Development of Efficient Blue-Emitting Semiconductors September 18th, 2020

An improved wearable, stretchable gas sensor using nanocomposites August 28th, 2020

Source: http://www.nanotech-now.com/news.cgi?story_id=56380

spot_img

Latest Intelligence

spot_img

Chat with us

Hi there! How can I help you?