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RE: LeoThread 2025-04-16 09:50

in LeoFinance6 months ago

“When you split water, two half-reactions occur,” said Northwestern’s Franz Geiger, who led the study. The half-reaction that produces oxygen is really difficult to perform because everything has to be aligned just right. It ends up taking more energy than theoretically calculated. If you do the math, it should require 1.23 volts. But, in reality, it requires more like 1.5 or 1.6 volts.”

“Providing that extra voltage costs money, and that’s why water splitting hasn’t been implemented at a large scale. By designing new catalysts that make water flipping easier, we could make water splitting more practical and cost-effective.”

The study reveals this molecular acrobatics as a key barrier to oxygen evolution, a critical half-reaction in water splitting. Even more importantly, the researchers found that adjusting the pH of water can make the flipping easier — opening new avenues to optimize the reaction and lower the cost of clean hydrogen fuel.