Laser-Induced NiFeOxNanolayer Enables Durable and Efficient Seawater Electrolysis at Industrial Current Densities

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Abstract

Seawater electrolysis is an emerging pathway for sustainable hydrogen production, yet long-term operation under industrial current densities is severely constrained by chloride-induced corrosion and catalyst degradation. Here, we introduce a laser-induced interface engineering strategy that leverages the rapid thermal dynamics of laser powder bed fusion (LPBF) to construct a ∼5 nm nonstoichiometric NiFeOxnanolayer epitaxially grown to a NiFe alloy substrate. This in situ fabricated nanolayer functions as a multifunctional interface, selectively adsorbing OHions through stable metal–oxygen (M–O) bonding, thereby suppressing Cl-driven surface degradation while simultaneously accelerating the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) kinetics by lowering the Gibbs free energy barrier of the OER intermediates (*OH) from 0.61 to 0.48 eV. As a result, the NiFe with oxide layer (NiFe-OL) electrode achieves an overpotential of 238 mV at 10 mA cm–2in simulated seawater, showing a marked 84 mV reduction compared to the bare NiFe alloy electrode, and maintains stable operation for over 1000 h at 1 A cm–2in alkaline seawater. This represents more than 25 times longer operational stability than the bare NiFe electrode, which fails after only ∼20 h under identical conditions. In particular, the laser-formed functionally integrated oxide nanointerface delivers a distinctive combination of corrosion resistance and electrochemical kinetics. Our findings demonstrate a robust seawater electrolysis electrode and demonstrate the applicability of scalable interface engineering for application in corrosive electrochemical systems.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)36728-36738
Number of pages11
JournalACS Nano
Volume19
Issue number41
DOIs
StatePublished - 21 Oct 2025

Keywords

  • additive manufacturing
  • corrosion resistance
  • hydrogen production
  • passivation layer
  • seawater−water splitting

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