Nature Communications (Aug 2023)

Concerning the stability of seawater electrolysis: a corrosion mechanism study of halide on Ni-based anode

  • Sixie Zhang,
  • Yunan Wang,
  • Shuyu Li,
  • Zhongfeng Wang,
  • Haocheng Chen,
  • Li Yi,
  • Xu Chen,
  • Qihao Yang,
  • Wenwen Xu,
  • Aiying Wang,
  • Zhiyi Lu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-40563-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract The corrosive anions (e.g., Cl−) have been recognized as the origins to cause severe corrosion of anode during seawater electrolysis, while in experiments it is found that natural seawater (~0.41 M Cl−) is usually more corrosive than simulated seawater (~0.5 M Cl−). Here we elucidate that besides Cl−, Br− in seawater is even more harmful to Ni-based anodes because of the inferior corrosion resistance and faster corrosion kinetics in bromide than in chloride. Experimental and simulated results reveal that Cl− corrodes locally to form narrow-deep pits while Br− etches extensively to generate shallow-wide pits, which can be attributed to the fast diffusion kinetics of Cl− and the lower reaction energy of Br− in the passivation layer. Additionally, for the Ni-based electrodes with catalysts (e.g., NiFe-LDH) loading on the surface, Br− causes extensive spalling of the catalyst layer, resulting in rapid performance degradation. This work clearly points out that, in addition to anti-Cl− corrosion, designing anti-Br− corrosion anodes is even more crucial for future application of seawater electrolysis.