Luminescence Thermometry Probes Local Heat Effects at the Platinum Electrode Surface during Alkaline Water Electrolysis

Publication date

2024-06

Authors

Jacobs, Thimo S.ISNI 0000000523805466
Park, Sunghak
Schönig, Marco
Weckhuysen, Bert M.ORCID 0000-0001-5245-1426ISNI 0000000110540180
Koper, Marc T.M.
van der Stam, WardISNI 0000000443863316

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Abstract

Accurate determination of the temperature dynamics at the electrode surface is crucial for advancing electrocatalysis, particularly in the development of stable materials that aid energy conversion and storage technologies. Here, lanthanide-based in situ luminescence thermometry was used to probe local heat effects at the platinum electrode surface during alkaline water electrolysis. It is demonstrated that the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) induces a more significant temperature increase compared to the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) under the same electrochemical conditions. This difference is attributed to variations in overpotential heating and local effects on Joule heating. Furthermore, local heat effects are not observed at increased electrolyte concentrations during the HER, whereas substantial temperature variations (up to 2 K) are detected for the OER at higher electrolyte concentrations. Our observations highlight the potential of in situ luminescence thermometry to measure interfacial temperature effects during electrocatalytic reactions.

Keywords

Chemistry (miscellaneous), Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment, Fuel Technology, Energy Engineering and Power Technology, Materials Chemistry, SDG 7 - Affordable and Clean Energy

Citation

Jacobs, T S, Park, S, Schönig, M, Weckhuysen, B M, Koper, M T M & van der Stam, W 2024, 'Luminescence Thermometry Probes Local Heat Effects at the Platinum Electrode Surface during Alkaline Water Electrolysis', ACS Energy Letters, vol. 9, no. 7, pp. 3335-3341. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsenergylett.4c01238