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A critical review on the definitions used to calculate the energy efficiency coefficients of water electrolysis cells working under near ambient temperature conditions

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Abstract The accurate knowledge of the energy efficiency coefficient of near ambient temperature water electrolysis (Alkaline, PEM or AEM Electrolyzer) is a critical-point to estimate the total cost of electrolytic… Click to show full abstract

Abstract The accurate knowledge of the energy efficiency coefficient of near ambient temperature water electrolysis (Alkaline, PEM or AEM Electrolyzer) is a critical-point to estimate the total cost of electrolytic hydrogen. After describing the fundamentals of these three processes and presenting the main data of water electro-dissociation under given temperature and pressure conditions, the energy efficiency coefficient can be calculated by taking the ratio of the theoretical energy (ΔH) to decompose water under equilibrium conditions (no current) to the real energy used (ΔH + energy losses) to electrolyze water at a given current intensity. Different approximations of this coefficient are discussed and compared to data from literature. Such coefficient can also be calculated by taking the ratio of the total energy of hydrogen collected at the exhaust of the electrolyzer to the total energy (electricity + heat) supplied to the complete system. It is demonstrated that both definitions are consistent and similar if all the energy involved is taken into account. It is also shown that some approximations, in particular those neglecting the thermal energy in the denominator of this ratio, give efficiency coefficients larger than unity for cell voltages lower than the thermo-neutral voltage, which is a thermodynamic non-sense.

Keywords: energy; water; ambient temperature; near ambient; energy efficiency

Journal Title: Journal of Power Sources
Year Published: 2020

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