Hydrogen is a clean fuel that is currently used to propel rockets in NASA's space programme and is widely expected to play an important role in a sustainable energy future.
The vast majority of today's hydrogen is produced from natural gas through a process called steam methane reforming that simultaneously releases carbon dioxide (CO2), but water electrolysis using electricity from solar photovoltaic (PV) offers a promising route to produce hydrogen without any associated CO2 emissions.
Researchers from Columbia University in the US have developed a novel photovoltaic-powered electrolysis device that can operate as a stand-alone platform that floats on open water.
State-of-the-art electrolyzers use expensive membranes to maintain separation of these two gases.
The new device relies instead on a novel electrode configuration that allows the gases to be separated and collected using the buoyancy of bubbles in water.
The design enables efficient operation with high product purity and without actively pumping the electrolyte.
Based on the concept of buoyancy-induced separation, the simple electrolyzer architecture produces H2 with purity as high as 99 per cent.
"We believe that our prototype is the first demonstration of a practical membraneless floating PV-electrolyzer system, and could inspire large-scale 'solar fuels rigs' that could generate large quantities of hydrogen fuel from abundant sunlight and seawater without taking up any space on land or competing with fresh water for agricultural uses," Esposito said.
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