Abstract
High energy consumption is the key problem to be solved in water electrolysis for hydrogen production. Imposing magnetic field during electrolysis is proved to be a research-worthy method to reduce the required electrical energy, since the magnetohydrodynamic convection can be induced without additional energy input. Considering the structure of commercial electrolyzers, the magnetic field perpendicular to the electrode surface is most likely to be applied in practical engineering. But there is still a lack of research on the gas-liquid two-phase flow in the electrolytic cell under this condition. To avoid mutual blocking between a large number of bubbles and obtain clear two-phase flow images of the electrolysis process, a wire electrode is used as cathode to generate hydrogen bubbles in this work. The cell voltage is obviously reduced by external magnetic field, and an interesting “bubble tornado” is formed under the action of induced magnetohydrodynamic convection. The numerical simulation results and theoretical analysis indicate that: (1) the formation of the bubble chain is caused by low-pressure region along the vertical axis; (2) the unstable low-pressure region is the key factor leading to the formation of continuously deformed bubble chain; (3) the bubble dispersion may be related to Kelvin-Helmholtz flow instability. We anticipate our work being a starting point for the application of magnetic field in practical engineering.
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