Materials Engineering for High Performance and Durability Proton Exchange Membrane Water Electrolyzers

Date Published
09/22/2025
Publication Type
Journal Article
Authors
DOI
10.1021/acsaem.5c01989
Abstract

Proton exchange membrane water electrolyzers (PEMWEs) are expected to play a crucial role in the global green energy transition during the 21st century. They provide a versatile and sustainable solution for generating hydrogen with very high purity in combination with renewable energies, such as solar and wind. Despite their promise, PEMWEs face several critical problems, including high costs, performance limitations, and durability challenges, particularly at low iridium (Ir) loading on the anode. Advancing next-generation PEMWEs requires extensive work on materials engineering of all cell components, including the catalyst layer (CL), membrane, porous transport layer (PTL), bipolar plate (BPP), and gasket. This task must be performed with the complementary contribution of different modeling and characterization techniques. This review presents a critical perspective from academia, research centers, and industry, mapping main developments, remaining gaps, and strategic pathways to advance PEMWE technology. A focus is devoted to key aspects, such as operation at low Ir loading, membrane durability, multiscale transport layers, porous and non-porous flow fields, multiphysics modeling, and multipurpose characterization techniques, which are thoroughly discussed. By unifying these topics, this review provides readers with the essential knowledge to grasp current developments and tackle tomorrow’s challenges in PEMWE engineering.

Journal
ACS Applied Energy Materials
Volume
8
Year of Publication
2025
Issue
18
Pagination
13050-13121
Publisher
American Chemical Society (ACS)
ISSN Number
2574-0962, 2574-0962
URL
Organizations
Research Areas
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