Strategies for Designing Anti‐Chlorine Corrosion Catalysts in Seawater Splitting
Huanghe Science and Technology College · University of Thessaly · +1 more institution
Abstract
Abstract The seawater splitting for green hydrogen production is emerging as a key research focus for sustainable energy. Nevertheless, the inherent complexity of seawater, with its diverse ion composition – especially chloride ions, calcium ions, and magnesium ions – poses significant challenges in catalyst design. Designing highly active electrocatalysts that can resist chloride ion corrosion during seawater splitting is still a challenge. This article presents an overview of the fundamental mechanisms of seawater splitting and explores issues encountered at both the cathode and the anode electrode. The focus then shifts to chlorine corrosion at the anode, examining recent advances in preventing chlorine…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 77.86
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 154
Authors
4Topics & keywords
- Seawater
- Materials science
- Chlorine
- Catalysis
- Corrosion
- Water splitting
- Inorganic chemistry
- Chemical engineering