Abstract

Electrolytic bubbles have a profound impact on mass transport in the vicinity of electrodes and greatly influence the electrolyzer efficiency and cell overpotential. However, experimental measurements of concentration fields around electrolytic bubbles with high spatio-temporal resolution is challenging. In this study, a succession of spatially-decoupled electrolytic bubbles growing in an initially quiescent electrolyte is simulated. The bubbles grow and depart from a hydrophobic cavity at the center of a ring microelectrode. The gas-liquid interface is modeled using a moving mesh topology. A geometric cutting protocol is developed to handle topology changes during bubble departure. The simulated bubbles show good agreement with the bubble growth dynamics observed in experiments. The bubbles in this spatially-decoupled system outgrow the region of electrolyte that is saturated with dissolved hydrogen. This leaves the apex of the bubble interface exposed to an undersaturated region of the electrolyte which leads to an outward flux of hydrogen gas. This is shown to limit the gas evolution efficiency of bubbles even though that they grow at a constant volumetric rate. By analyzing the distribution of the flux of dissolved hydrogen along the bubble interface along with the development of dissolve hydrogen concentration profiles around the bubble, we show that the magnitude of the outward diffusive flux at the apex of the bubble decreases with increasing electrolysis current.

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