Renewable energy-powered seawater electrolysis is a green and attractive technique for producing high-purity hydrogen. However, severe chlorideions (Cl-) and their derivatives tend to corrode anodic catalysts at ampere-level current densities and hinder the application of seawater-to-H2 systems. Herein, a polycalmagite (PCM)-coated NiFe layered double hydroxide is presented on Ni foam (NiFe LDH@PCM/NF) that exhibits exceptional stability in alkaline seawater. PCM not only acts as a conductive layer to reduce charge transfer resistance of the anodes but also as a polymer-based protective layer to inhibit Cl- adsorption and stabilize metal ions oxidation due to its own anions and strong adhesion, thereby increasing activity and stability during alkaline seawater. Thus, NiFe LDH@PCM/NF only needs a low overpotential of 364 mV to reach up to 1000 mA cm-2 and maintains operation for 500 h without activity degradation. Moreover, a minimal amount of hypochlorite can be detected in electrolyte after a 500-h stability test. This development affords a significant exploration in creating durable and efficient anodes, highlighting the importance of polymer coating toward anti-corrosion in alkaline seawater oxidation.
Keywords: Cl− repulsion; NiFe LDH; alkaline seawater oxidation; polymer coating.
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