đ§ȘÂ A simplification of the scientific text below
Water is made of hydrogen and oxygen and if you run electricity through water, you can break it apart. This is done with electricity flowing between 2 metal plates results with one side releasing hydrogen gas and the other side releases oxygen gas – this simple process is called Electrolysis.
However, water does not conduct electricity well, so you need to make this easier by mixing the water with a chemical called potassium hydroxide â a process that is called Alkaline Water Electrolysis â a strong alkaline substance that is highly corrosive. It is often called caustic potash and shows up in everyday life more than most people realize. In simple terms, itâs a strong cleaning and dissolving agent, so itâs used in products that need heavyâduty cleaning power.
Hydrogen is expected to play a major role in cutting global carbon emissions, and one of the main ways to produce clean hydrogen is through the above mentioned alkaline water electrolysis. Today, these systems usually run at about 60â90âŻÂ°C. Running them hotterâabove 100âŻÂ°Câcould make the chemical reactions happen faster. Faster reactions mean the system would use less electricity and could make better use of waste heat.
However, higher temperatures also create new problems. The liquid used in the system (a hot potassium hydroxide solution) and the hot hydrogen and oxygen gases become much more corrosive. This means the equipment wears out faster unless more expensive, corrosionâresistant materials are used. So, while performance improves, the cost of building the system goes up.
To understand whether operating at 100â200âŻÂ°C is worthwhile, itâs important to look not only at the materials but also at how the whole electrolyzer is designed. Earlier research mostly focused on improving reaction efficiency and testing new catalysts and metal alloys. This review highlights additional issues that often get less attention, such as how the electrolyte behaves at high temperatures, how the stack should be engineered, and what the economic trade-offs look like.
The analysis shows that running hotter increases unwanted effects like stray electrical currents, mixing of hydrogen and oxygen in the circulation loop, and gas leaking through the separator. A cost estimate for a system running at 120âŻÂ°C suggests the electrolyzer stack becomes about 19% more expensive, and the full system can cost more than twice as much if highânickel materials are required. To make the investment worthwhile, the system needs to run continuously so that the energy savings can outweigh the higher upfront cost.
Scientific part of this article
The race to scale green hydrogen hinges on how fast and how efficiently we can split water. Alkaline water electrolysis (AWE) is the veteran technology: proven, scalable, and comparatively affordable. The latest push is to elevate operating temperatures from the 60â90âŻÂ°C norm into the intermediate range (100â200âŻÂ°C). The premise is simple: hotter cells run faster. The reality is more nuanced and more interesting once you unpack thermodynamics, electrolyte behaviour, materials, gas purity, safety, and economics.
Why hotter helps and where it stops helping
Raising temperature nudges the reversible voltage down (from ~1.23âŻV at 25âŻÂ°C toward ~1.14âŻV near 200âŻÂ°C), shrinking the minimum electrical work required. But the real performance win lives in kinetics: reactions at the electrodes accelerate, activation and ohmic losses fall, and current density rises at a given cell voltage. Lab data and modeling agree: temperature cuts electrode overpotentials significantly and can move AWE closer to PEMâlike current densities without precious metals. Caveat: concentration overpotentials can creep in at very high currents, so design must balance speed with mass transport and bubble management.
KOH doesnât just get âhotterâ – it gets different
Potassium hydroxide (KOH) is the workhorse electrolyte, and its properties morph with temperature and concentration. Conductivity increases with concentration up to an optimum that shifts with temperature; viscosity drops, easing pumping and mass transfer; surface tension falls, improving bubble detachment. But more heat brings higher vapor pressures and tricky water activity, which drive stack pressure requirements and water balance. Gas solubility and diffusivity also change, sometimes counterintuitively, complicating predictions of gas mixing in circulation loops and crossover through separators. Designers must treat KOH as a dynamic, temperatureâsensitive system, not a constant.
Corrosion is the price of speed
The hardest barrier to commercialization at 100â200âŻÂ°C is materials. Standard stainless steels that survive at 80â90âŻÂ°C degrade faster in hot, concentrated KOH. Nickel and highânickel alloys (e.g., Inconel, Monel) offer far better resistance, especially near welds and crevices, but at much higher cost. On the cathode, nickel and modified Raney Ni can deliver multiâthousandâhour durability and lower HER overpotentials; on the anode, mixed oxides and spinels can catalyze OER but must withstand prolonged, oxidizing, hot alkaline exposure. Diaphragms are the makeâorâbreak: polymerâceramic composites and mesoporous ceramics (e.g., SrTiOâ, YSZ) show promise above 110âŻÂ°C, yet gas permeability and brittleness are active engineering fronts. A zeroâgap architecture (so successful in lowâtemperature AWE) is risky here because the diaphragm faces harsher OER conditions and higher crossover pressure.
Gas purity and safety: The invisible constraints
At elevated temperatures, hydrogen in oxygen (HTO) and oxygen in hydrogen (OTH) can rise via two routes: electrolyte mixing in recirculation and diffusion/convective crossover through the diaphragm. Because diffusivity increases with temperature and thin, highly porous separators reduce resistance (good) while boosting permeability (bad), safety margins tighten, especially under pressure (20â30âŻbar is common). Keeping Hâ in Oâ far below the explosion threshold demands careful control of diaphragm thickness, porosity, tortuosity, pressure differentials, and manifold design to suppress stray currents and avoid supersaturation near electrodes. Elevatedâtemperature stacks also warrant nitrogenâblanketed housings, rigorous leak detection, and fast interlocks, what youâd expect from highâpressure hydrogen systems, but tuned for hot, caustic service.
Smaller, faster, pricier – and less flexible
On paper, hotter AWE cuts specific energy consumption (e.g., moving from ~52â53âŻkWh/kg Hâ near 80âŻÂ°C toward the highâ40s at ~120â130âŻÂ°C in some configurations) and supports higher current densities, shrinking the active area and stack footprint. In practice, the CAPEX moves up because nickelârich alloys and advanced diaphragms replace cheaper steels and polymers, not only in the stack (bipolar plates, frames, seals) but across the balance of plant (pumps, heat exchangers, separators, piping). A representative estimate: ~19% higher stack cost and system costs more than double when highânickel alloys dominate. The business implication is clear: intermediateâtemperature AWE rewards continuous, baseload operation that harvests energy savings and waste heat (â„100âŻÂ°C) over long runtimes. It is not a natural fit for highly intermittent, stopâstart duty unless a compelling offtake and heatâintegration case offsets the capital premium.
Actions, Policy, Investment
Actions (R&D & Engineering)
- Electrolyte & models: Close data gaps on highâT KOH (gas solubility/diffusivity, activity), and integrate bubble dynamics and degradation into stack/system models.
- Diaphragms: Develop lowâpermeability, highâconductivity separators stable â„120âŻÂ°C; explore graded porosity/tortuosity and robust ceramicâpolymer hybrids.
- Materials & joins: Qualify weld procedures and creviceâresistant designs for highânickel alloys; validate longâterm OERâside coatings and surface treatments.
- Manifolds & purity: Optimize fluid/gas manifold geometries to suppress stray currents and mixing; implement realâtime purity monitoring with fast trip logic.
- Thermal & pressure control: Standardize 30âŻbarâclass designs with precise water activity control for liquidâfeed mode; steamâfeed only where waste heat is abundant and stable.
Policy (Regulation & Programs)
- Safety codes: Update electrolyzer standards to explicitly cover 100â200âŻÂ°C alkaline operation, purity thresholds, and nitrogenâblanketed enclosures.
- Demonstrations: Fund multiâyear pilots that measure durability, crossover, and OPEX under baseload; require open data on failures and maintenance.
- Heat integration: Incentivize district heating/industrial heat coupling to monetize highâgrade waste heat and improve project economics.
Investment (Commercial Strategy)
- Site selection: Prioritize locations with steady renewable baseload or firm power, industrial offtake, and the ability to reuse waste heat.
- Procurement: Hedge nickel alloy price/availability; consider modular balanceâofâplant designed for corrosive service to streamline maintenance.
- Business model: Target continuous operation and longâterm offtake contracts; use LCOH models that capture energy savings vs. higher CAPEX and reduced compression needs at ~30âŻbar operation.
Source: Advances and challenges in intermediate temperature alkaline water electrolysis: A critical review
Advances and challenges in intermediate temperature alkaline water electrolysis: A critical review by Rubab Zahra, Masoud Moshtaghi, Vesa Ruuskanen, Antti Kosonen, Jero Ahola , Christodoulos Chatzichristodoulou, Jens Oluf Jensen, Arunachala Mada Kannan, Pertti Kauranen from LUT University, Finland, Technical University of Denmark and Arizona State University, USA