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A bio-inspired molecular water oxidation catalyst for renewable hydrogen generation: An examination of salt effects

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conference contribution
posted on 2024-11-14, 08:33 authored by Robin Brimblecombe, Miriam Rotstein, Annette Koo, G Charles Dismukes, Gerhard SwiegersGerhard Swiegers, Leone Spiccia
Most transport fuels are derived from fossil fuels, generate greenhouse gases, and consume significant amounts of water in the extraction, purification, and/or burning processes. The generation of hydrogen using solar energy to split water, ideally from abundant water sources such as sea water or other non-potable sources, could potentially provide an unlimited, clean fuel for the future. Solar, electrochemical water splitting typically combines a photoanode at which water oxidation occurs, with a cathode for proton reduction to hydrogen. In recent work, we have found that a bioinspired tetra-manganese cluster catalyzes water oxidation at relatively low overpotentials (0.38 V) when doped into a Nafion proton conduction membrane deposited on a suitable electrode surface, and illuminated with visible light. We report here that this assembly is active in aqueous and organic electrolyte solutions containing a range of different salts in varying concentrations. Similar photocurrents were obtained using electrolytes containing 0.0 - 0.5 M sodium sulfate, sodium perchlorate or sodium chloride. A slight decline in photocurrent was observed for sodium perchlorate but only at and above 5.0 M concentration. In acetonitrile and acetone solutions containing 10% water, increasing the electrolyte concentration was found to result in leaching of the catalytic species from the membrane and a decrease in photocurrent. Leaching was not observed when the system was tested in an ionic liquid containing water, however, a lower photocurrent was generated than observed in aqueous electrolyte. We conclude that immersion of the membrane in an aqueous solution containing an electrolyte concentration of 0.05 - 0.5M represent good conditions for operation for the cubium/Nafion catalytic system.

History

Citation

Brimblecombe, R., Rotstein, M., Koo, A., Dismukes, G. Charles., Swiegers, G. F. & Spiccia, L. (2009). A bio-inspired molecular water oxidation catalyst for renewable hydrogen generation: An examination of salt effects. In F. Osterloch (Eds.), Proceedings of the SPIE Volume 7408: Solar Hydrogen and Nanotechnology (pp. 1-8). United States: S P I E - International Society for Optical Engineering. Original item available here

Parent title

Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering

Volume

7408

Pagination

1-8

Language

English

RIS ID

40235

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