Industrial output of water, for production of hydrogen. Efficiency of modern hydrogen generators is measured by
energy consumed per standard volume of hydrogen (MJ/m3), assuming
standard temperature and pressure of the H2. The lower the energy used by a generator, the higher its efficiency would be; a 100%-efficient electrolyser would consume (higher heating value) of
hydrogen, . Practical electrolysis (using a
rotating electrolyser at 15 bar pressure) may consume , and a further if the hydrogen is compressed for use in hydrogen cars. By adding external heat at , electricity consumption may be reduced. There are three main technologies available on the market:
alkaline,
proton exchange membrane (PEM), and
solid oxide electrolyzers. Alkaline electrolyzers are cheaper in terms of investment (they generally use nickel catalysts), but least efficient. PEM electrolyzers are more expensive (they generally use expensive platinum-group metal catalysts) but are more efficient and can operate at higher current densities, and can, therefore, be possibly cheaper if the hydrogen production is large enough. Solid oxide electrolyzer cells (SOEC) are the third most common type of electrolysis, and the most expensive, and use high operating temperatures to increase efficiency. The theoretical electrical efficiency of SOEC is close to 100% at 90% hydrogen production. Degradation of the system over time does not affect the efficiency of SOEC electrolyzers initially unlike PEM and alkaline electrolyzers. As the SOEC system degrades, the cell voltage increases, producing more heat in the system naturally. Due to this, less energy is required to keep the system hot, which will make up for the energy losses from dramatic degradation initially. SOEC requires replacement of the stack after some years of degradation.
Efficiency Electrolyzer vendors provide efficiencies based on
enthalpy. To assess the claimed efficiency of an electrolyzer it is important to establish how it was defined by the vendor (i.e. what enthalpy value, what current density, etc.). Conventional alkaline electrolysis has an efficiency of about 70%. Accounting for the accepted use of the
higher heating value (because inefficiency via heat can be redirected back into the system to create the steam required by the catalyst), average working efficiencies for
PEM electrolysis are around 80%. This is expected to increase to between 82 and 86% before 2030. Theoretical efficiency for PEM electrolysers are predicted up to 94%. In 2024, Australian company Hysata announced a device capable of 95% efficiency relative to the higher heating value of hydrogen. Conventional systems consume 52.5 kWh to produce hydrogen that can store 39.4 kWh of energy (1 kg). Its technology requires only 41.5 kWh to produce 1 kg. It uses a capillary-fed electrolyzer to eliminate hydrogen and oxygen bubbles in the fluid electrolyte. Bubbles are non-conductive, and can stick to electrodes, reducing electrode exposure to the electrolyte, increasing resistance. Hysata places the electrolyte at the bottom of the device. Capillary action draws it through a porous, hydrophilic separator between the electrodes. Each electrode has complete contact with the electrolyte on the inner side, and a dry chamber on the outer side. The effect of the build-up of impurities in the cell from those initially present in the feed water is not yet available.
Cost Calculating cost is complicated, and a
market price barely exists. producing 1 kg of hydrogen (which has a
specific energy of 143 MJ/kg) requires of electricity. At an electricity cost of $0.06/kW·h, as set out in the US Department of Energy hydrogen production targets for 2015, the hydrogen cost is $3/kg. Equipment cost depends on mass production, and the cost of electrolyzers rose 50% between 2021 and 2024.
Operating cost depends on electricity cost for about half of the levelised product price. for wind and solar in many regions. This puts the $4/gasoline gallon equivalent (gge) H2 dispensed objective well within reach, and close to a slightly elevated natural gas production cost for SMR. In other parts of the world, the price of SMR hydrogen is by between $1–3/kg on average. This makes production of hydrogen via electrolysis cost competitive in many regions already, as outlined by Nel Hydrogen and others, including an article by the IEA examining the conditions which could lead to a competitive advantage for electrolysis. The large price increase of gas during the
2021–2022 global energy crisis made hydrogen electrolysis economic in some parts of the world.
Facilities Some large industrial electrolyzers are operating at several megawatts. , the largest is a 150 MW alkaline facility in Ningxia, China, with a capacity up to 23,000 tonnes per year. While higher-efficiency Western electrolysis equipment can cost $1,200/kW, lower-efficiency Chinese equipment can cost $300/kW, but with a lower lifetime of 60,000 hours. , different analysts predict annual manufacture of equipment by 2030 as 47 GW, 104 GW and 180 GW, respectively.
Overpotential Real water electrolyzers require higher voltages for the reaction to proceed. The part that exceeds 1.23 V is called
overpotential or overvoltage, and represents any kind of loss and nonideality in the electrochemical process. For an ideal cell, the largest
overpotential is the
reaction overpotential for the four-electron oxidation of water to dioxygen at the anode. This reaction can be accelerated by
electrocatalysts, with
platinum-based alloys commonly regarded as benchmark materials for this process. There are many approaches, among them a 30-year-old recipe for
molybdenum sulfide,
graphene quantum dots,
carbon nanotubes, and nickel/nickel-oxide.
Trimolybdenum phosphide () has been reported as a nonprecious metal and earth‐abundant candidate with outstanding catalytic properties that can be used for electrocatalytic processes. The catalytic performance of Mo3P nanoparticles is tested in the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER), indicating an onset potential of as low as 21 mV, H2 formation rate, and exchange current density of 214.7 μmol/(s·g) cat (at only 100 mV overpotential) and 279.07 μA/cm2, respectively, which are among the closest values yet observed to platinum. The simpler two-electron reaction to produce hydrogen at the cathode can be electrocatalyzed with almost no overpotential by platinum, or in theory a
hydrogenase enzyme. If other, less effective, materials are used for the cathode (e.g.
graphite), large overpotentials will appear.
Thermodynamics The electrolysis of water in standard conditions requires a theoretical minimum of 237 kJ of electrical energy input to dissociate each mole of water, which is the standard
Gibbs free energy of formation of water. It also requires thermal energy to balance the change in entropy of the reaction. Therefore, the process cannot proceed at constant temperature at electrical energy inputs below 286 kJ per mol if no external thermal energy is added. Since each mole of water requires two moles of
electrons, and given that the
Faraday constant F represents the charge of a mole of electrons (96485 C/mol), it follows that the minimum voltage necessary for electrolysis is about 1.23 V. If electrolysis is carried out at high temperature, this voltage reduces. This effectively allows the electrolyser to operate at more than 100% electrical efficiency. In electrochemical systems this means that heat must be supplied to the reactor to sustain the reaction. In this way thermal energy can be used for part of the electrolysis energy requirement. In a similar way the required voltage can be reduced (below 1 V) if fuels (such as carbon, alcohol, biomass) are reacted with water (PEM based electrolyzer in low temperature) or oxygen ions (solid oxide electrolyte based electrolyzer in high temperature). This results in some of the fuel's energy being used to "assist" the electrolysis process and can reduce the overall cost of hydrogen produced. However, observing the entropy component (and other losses), voltages over 1.48 V are required for the reaction to proceed at practical current densities (the
thermoneutral voltage). In the case of water electrolysis, Gibbs free energy represents the minimum
work necessary for the reaction to proceed, and the reaction enthalpy is the amount of energy (both work and heat) that has to be provided so the reaction products are at the same temperature as the reactant (i.e. standard temperature for the values given above). Potentially, an electrolyzer operating at 1.48 V would operate isothermally at a temperature of 25°C as the electrical energy supplied would be equal to the enthalpy (heat) of water decomposition and this would require 20% more electrical energy than the minimum. ==See also==