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What are the Differences between Chlor-alkali Electrolysis and Alkaline Water Electrolysis for Hydrogen Production?

Release time:

2026-04-30


As a basic chemical industry producing chlorine (Cl2) and caustic soda (NaOH), the value of hydrogen produced as a byproduct of the chlor-alkali industry is increasingly recognized. Compared to dedicated water electrolysis for hydrogen production, chlor-alkali byproduct hydrogen is lower in cost, but it contains small amounts of impurities such as chlorine, oxygen, and nitrogen, significantly limiting its application. The following is a detailed comparison of the technological differences between ion-exchange membrane chlor-alkali hydrogen production and alkaline water electrolysis (AWE) hydrogen production, focusing on three core dimensions: electrolysis principle, electrode materials, and membrane materials.

 

1. Comparison of the principles of chlor-alkali hydrogen production and alkaline water electrolysis for hydrogen production: 

With the increasing importance and rapid development of green hydrogen energy, the most widely used alkaline water electrolysis (AWE) hydrogen production technology, while both chlor-alkali hydrogen production and chlor-alkali hydrogen production belong to alkaline electrolysis systems, differ significantly in their core hydrogen production mechanisms. A detailed comparison follows:

Comparison Dimension

Chlor-Alkali Hydrogen Production

Alkaline Water Electrolysis for Hydrogen Production

System Nature

Alkaline

Alkaline

Core Reactions

Anode: Chlorine Evolution Reaction (CER)
Cathode: Hydrogen Evolution Reaction (HER)

Anode: Oxygen Evolution Reaction (OER)
Cathode: Hydrogen Evolution Reaction (HER)

Core Components

Electrolyzer, Cation Exchange Membrane, Electrodes

Electrolyzer, Diaphragm, Electrolyte, Electrodes

Anolyte Medium

Saturated Sodium Chloride (NaCl) Solution

Alkaline Electrolyte (20%~30% KOH solution)

Catholyte Medium

Dilute NaOH Solution (approx. 30% by mass)

Alkaline Electrolyte (20%~30% KOH solution)

Charge Carrier

Na⁺ (migrates through the cation exchange membrane)

OH⁻ (migrates through the diaphragm)

Cathode Reaction

H⁺ is reduced to H₂; Na⁺ combines with OH⁻ to form NaOH, which gradually concentrates

Water molecules gain electrons to form H₂ and OH⁻

Anode Reaction

Cl⁻ is oxidized to Cl₂

OH⁻ is oxidized to O₂ and electrons

Electrolyzer Structure

Bipolar zero-gap (membrane) design

Double bipolar zero-gap (membrane) design

 

2.Comparison of Electrode Materials for Chlor-alkali Hydrogen Production and Alkaline Water Electrolysis Hydrogen Production:

 The electrode is the core site of the electrolysis reaction, and the selection and modification of the catalytic materials (especially noble metal catalytic materials) on its surface directly determine the electrode performance, electrolyzer life, and energy consumption level. A detailed comparison of the differences in electrode materials between the two technologies is as follows:

Comparison Dimension

Chlor-Alkali Electrolysis(Anode/Cathode)

Alkaline Water Electrolysis (AWE, Anode/Cathode)

Alkaline Water Electrolysis (AWE, Anode/Cathode)

Operating Environment

Anode: Strongly acidic (Cl⁻ system), 80~90°C;
Cathode: Strongly alkaline

Entire system strongly alkaline, 60-90°C

Chlor-alkali anode requires chlorine corrosion resistance; AWE requires alkali corrosion resistance throughout

Anode Substrate Material

Titanium (Ti) substrate

Nickel (Ni) substrate

Ti resists chlorine corrosion and has good conductivity; Ni resists alkali corrosion and has lower cost

Anode Catalytic Coating

RuO₂ + IrO₂ mixed oxide (DSA)

Non-precious metal based / composite coating

Chlor-alkali focuses on Chlorine Evolution Reaction (CER) activity; AWE focuses on Oxygen Evolution Reaction (OER) activity and alkaline stability

Cathode Substrate Material

Ni mesh / Ni wire woven mesh

Ni-based materials (Ni mesh, Ni foam, Ni felt, etc.)

Ni has far better stability in strong alkali than carbon steel, suitable for ion-exchange membrane electrolyzers and high-alkali conditions

Cathode Catalytic Coating

Ni-S, Ni-Co, Raney Ni (no precious metals)

Non-precious metal alloys (Ni-S, Ni-Co, Ni-Mo, etc.)

Both aim to reduce Hydrogen Evolution Reaction (HER) overpotential; AWE places more emphasis on low cost and low precious metal loading

Operating Current Density

Anode: 5000~6000 A/m²

Anode: 2000-4000 A/m²

Chlor-alkali DSA technology is mature; AWE has seen recent breakthroughs in electrodes/diaphragms, significantly increasing current density

Comparison
Dimension

Chlor-Alkali
Electrolysis
(Anode/Cathode)

Alkaline Water
Electrolysis
(AWE,
Anode/Cathode)

Core Reasons for Differences

Core Performance Goals

Low chlorine evolution overpotential, chlorine corrosion resistance, long life, high chlorine efficiency

Low oxygen/hydrogen evolution overpotential, alkali corrosion resistance, low cost, high current density adaptability

Chlor-alkali core is efficient chlorine/caustic production; AWE core is efficient hydrogen production and energy consumption reduction

Cost Control Logic

Relies on mature precious metal (Ru/Ir) coating technology, reducing costs through scale

Focuses on low precious metal loading, non-precious metal substitution, and bifunctional electrodes to simplify structure

AWE is more cost-sensitive, needing to balance performance with large-scale application costs

 

3.Comparison of Membrane Materials for Chlor-alkali Hydrogen Production and Alkaline Water Electrolysis Hydrogen Production:

 Membrane materials are key components in electrolyzers, separating the anode and cathode, and enabling charge transfer and product separation. Due to differences in core reactions and media, the membrane materials used in these two technologies differ significantly in type, function, and performance: the chlor-alkali industry primarily uses cation exchange membranes, while alkaline water electrolysis hydrogen production mainly uses diaphragm membranes. A detailed comparison is as follows:

Comparison Dimension

Chlor-Alkali Industry Cation Exchange Membrane

Alkaline Water Electrolysis Diaphragm (for AWE)

Core Application Scenario

Chlor-alkali electrolyzer (NaCl electrolysis for Cl₂, NaOH, H₂ production)

Alkaline water electrolyzer (KOH electrolyte for hydrogen production)

Membrane Type / Structure

Perfluorosulfonic acid (PFSA) + Perfluorocarboxylic acid (PFCA) double-layer composite cation exchange membrane

Early: Asbestos diaphragm → PPS woven fabric → Composite diaphragm (PPS + ZrO₂ / polysulfone coating)

Core Functional Group

Sulfonic acid group (-SO₃⁻), Carboxylic acid group (-COO⁻)

No ion exchange groups (porous physical barrier); composite membrane coating enhances hydrophilicity

Working Principle

Allows directional migration of Na⁺ and other cations, blocks back-diffusion of Cl⁻ 

Physically separates anode and cathode, allows OH⁻/water to pass 

 

and OH⁻, prevents reaction between Cl₂ and NaOH

through, blocks H₂/O₂ cross-permeation

Representative Material / System

Perfluorosulfonic/carboxylic acid composite membrane (with PTFE reinforcing mesh)

PPS diaphragm fabric, PPS+ZrO₂ composite diaphragm, polysulfone microporous membrane

Core Advantages

Current efficiency ≥96%, low energy consumption, product purity ≥99.5%, less contamination, service life 3-5 years

Low cost, good alkali resistance, high mechanical strength, composite membrane service life ≥5 years, high temperature resistance up to 110°C

Main Disadvantages / Challenges

High technical barrier, expensive, poor resistance to impurities (e.g., Ca²⁺, Mg²⁺)

Traditional diaphragm: high impedance, high hydrogen permeability; composite membrane: coating easily peels off, poor durability

Industrial Maturity

Mature industrialization, global mainstream technology

Mature industrialization, traditional PPS is mature

 

4. Conclusion

Both chlor-alkali electrolysis and alkaline water electrolysis for hydrogen production are mature electrolysis technologies. Their differences in system properties, core components, and performance targets stem from their different design intentions: chlor-alkali electrolysis focuses on producing chlorine and caustic soda, with hydrogen as a byproduct; alkaline water electrolysis aims to produce high-purity hydrogen efficiently and at low cost. Against the backdrop of the rapid development of the hydrogen energy industry, these two technologies can learn from each other's experience in electrode materials, membrane materials, and electrolyzer structures. Through technological integration and innovation, it is hoped that the performance of both electrolyzers can be further optimized, production costs and energy consumption reduced, and the high-quality development of electrolytic hydrogen production technology and the hydrogen energy industry can be promoted.

Chlor-alkali Industry,Hydrogen Production,Alkaline Water Electrolysis,Chlor-alkali Hydrogen Production,Chlor-Alkali Electrolysis,Ion-exchange Membrane Chlor-alkali

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