Durable, pure water–fed, anion-exchange membrane electrolyzers through interphase engineering

Date Published
10/16/2025
Publication Type
Journal Article
Authors
DOI
10.1126/science.adw7100
Abstract

Anion-exchange membrane water electrolyzers (AEMWEs) promise scalable, low-cost hydrogen production but are limited by the electrochemical instability of their anode ionomers. We report interphase engineering using inorganic-containing molecular additives that coassemble with ionomer, enabling pure water–fed AEMWEs to operate with a degradation rate <0.5 millivolt per hour at 2.0 amperes per square centimeter and 70°C—a >20-fold durability improvement. Analysis of different additives and ionomers shows that the stabilization mechanism involves cross-links between metal oxo/hydroxo oligomers and ionomers. Under operation, the inorganic additive enriches, forming an interphase near the water-oxidation catalyst that passivates the anode ionomer against continuous degradation while maintaining mechanical integrity and hydroxide conductivity. This additive-based interphase-engineering strategy provides a path to durable AEMWEs that operate without supporting electrolytes and is adaptable across diverse catalysts and ionomers for electrochemical technologies.

Journal
Science
Volume
390
Year of Publication
2025
Issue
6770
Pagination
294-298
Publisher
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
ISSN Number
0036-8075, 1095-9203
URL
Organizations
Research Areas
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