Skip to content
1900

Recent Progress in Seawater Electrolysis for Hydrogen Evolution by Transition Metal Phosphides

Abstract

The electrocatalytic seawater splitting has become an important and necessary way for large-scale hydrogen production with challenges ahead. In this review, a brief introduction to the reaction mechanism of seawater electrocatalytic process is first provided, including the cathodic hydrogen evolution reaction and the anodic oxygen evolution reaction, as well as the competitive chloride evolution reaction. Recent progress in transition metal phosphides-based catalysts for seawater electrolysis, such as phosphorus doped transition metals, binary metal phosphides, and structural engineering are then evaluated and discussed. Finally, the challenges and opportunities of transition metal phosphides are proposed and discussed.

Funding source: This work was supported by the Key Research and Development Project of Hainan Province (ZDYF2020037, 2020207), the National Natural Science Foundation of China (21805104), the Basic and Applied Basic Research Foundation of Guangdong Province (2019A1515110558), and the Start-up Research Foundation of Hainan University (KYQD(ZR)-20008, 20082, 20083, 20084, 21065).
Related subjects: Production & Supply Chain
Loading

Article metrics loading...

/content/journal7423
2021-12-07
2025-12-05
/content/journal7423
Loading
This is a required field
Please enter a valid email address
Approval was a Success
Invalid data
An Error Occurred
Approval was partially successful, following selected items could not be processed due to error
Please enter a valid_number test