Abstract
To reduce the reliance on fossil fuel, H2, as a clean fuel, has attracted substantial research and development activities in recent years. The traditional water splitting approach requires an applied bias of more than 1.5 V and the use of ion-selective membranes to prevent the formation of a potentially explosive H2–O2 gas mixture, resulting in increased cost and system design complexity. Here, a solar-driven H2 production process requiring a much lower applied bias of 1.05 V is reported whereby aniline (ANI) is oxidized to polyaniline (PANI) at the anode with a yield of 96% and H2 evolution reaction occurs at the cathode with a faradaic efficiency of 98.6 ± 3.9%. The process has multiple advantages including the elimination of ion-exchange membrane as PANI is a solid product that also is of substantially higher value than O2. For demonstration, a single junction perovskite solar cell and low-cost earth abundant CoP catalyst are successfully applied for this process. This process contributes to the advancement of solar-driven low-cost H2 generation coupled with co-production of a high-value product expediting the transition to a hydrogen economy.
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Chen, H., Zheng, J., Ballestas-Barrientos, A., Bing, J., Liao, C., Yuen, A. K. L., … Ho-Baillie, A. W. Y. (2022). Solar-Driven Co-Production of Hydrogen and Value-Add Conductive Polyaniline Polymer. Advanced Functional Materials, 32(52). https://doi.org/10.1002/adfm.202204807
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