Anion-Exchange-Membrane Electrolysis with Alkali-Free Water Feed

Mohsin Muhyuddin, Carlo Santoro, Luigi Osmieri, Valerio C.A. Ficca, Ariel Friedman, Karam Yassin, Gioele Pagot, Enrico Negro, Anastasiia Konovalova, Grace Lindquist, Liam Twight, Minkyoung Kwak, Enrico Berretti, Vito Di Noto, Frédéric Jaouen, Lior Elbaz, Dario R. Dekel, Piercarlo Mustarelli, Shannon W. Boettcher, Alessandro LavacchiPlamen Atanassov

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

6 Scopus citations

Abstract

Hydrogen is a green and sustainable energy vector that can facilitate the large-scale integration of intermittent renewable energy, renewable fuels for heavy transport, and deep decarbonization of hard-to-abate industries. Anion-exchange-membrane water electrolyzers (AEM-WEs) have several achieved or expected competitive advantages over other electrolysis technologies, including the use of precious metal-free electrocatalysts at both electrodes, fluorine-free hydrocarbon-based ionomeric membranes and bipolar plates based on inexpensive materials. Contrasting the analogous proton-exchange-membrane system (PEM-WE), where pure water is circulated (no support electrolyte), the current generation of AEM-WEs necessitates the circulation of a dilute aqueous alkaline electrolyte for reaching high energy efficiency and durability. For several reasons, including but not limited to lower cost of balance-of-plant, lower operating cost and improved device’s lifetime, achieving high cell efficiency and performance using an alkali-free water feed is highly desirable. In this review, we develop and build a foundational understanding of AEM-WEs operating with pure water, as well as discuss the effects of operating with natural water feeds like seawater. After a discussion of the possible advantages of pure-water-fed AEM-WEs, we cover the thermodynamic and kinetic processes involved in AEM-WE, followed by a detailed review of materials and components and their integration in the device. We highlight the influence of electrolyte composition and alkali/electrolyte-free feed on the membrane-electrode assembly, ionomers, electrocatalysts, porous transport layer, bipolar plates and operating configuration. We provide evidence for how the pure water feed engenders several issues related to the degradation of device components and propose mitigation strategies.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)6906-6976
Number of pages71
JournalChemical Reviews
Volume125
Issue number15
DOIs
StatePublished - 13 Aug 2025

Bibliographical note

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© 2025 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society

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