
Energy security and climate change are among the greatest challenges of our time. To reduce dependence on fossil fuels, renewable energy sources are emerging as key solutions for sustainable energy production. To this end, scalable solutions are essential for storing and transporting renewable energy. Hydrogen produced in water electrolyzers and reconverted into electricity in fuel cells can help balance the seasonal variability of renewable energy.
Fuel cells have the potential to significantly contribute to the decarbonization of the transport sector. Transport of people and goods accounts for almost one‑third of global greenhouse gas emissions. Despite this potential, the widespread adoption of modern fuel cells and electrolyzers remains limited due to high investment costs. This is mainly due to expensive noble‑metal catalysts and perfluorinated proton exchange membranes.
This challenge has sparked growing interest in anion exchange membranes. Under alkaline conditions, they offer several advantages:
- Use of non‑noble metal catalysts thanks to non‑corrosive conditions
- More sustainable membrane materials
However, there are hurdles to their introduction, particularly their short lifetime under alkaline conditions and oxidative stress. The formation of hydrogen peroxide and hydroxyl radicals under alkaline conditions is responsible for the accelerated degradation of polymer membranes. Investigation radical‑induced degradation of anion exchange membranes is therefore of central importance.
Hence, efficient radical generation in the laboratory is required. Current methods such as thermal decomposition or UV activation of hydrogen peroxide are inefficient and prone to side reactions, limiting their relevance to real operating conditions. Immersion in oxygen‑saturated alkaline solutions has provided useful insights, but cannot distinguish between natural membrane degradation and radical‑accelerated breakdown.
Radioactivity and electromagnetic pulse radiation allow precise control of radical formation but require expensive, specialized infrastructure. Affordable and practical solutions are needed to study radicals under realistic laboratory conditions.
Researchers from SINTEF in Norway and ETH Zurich have addressed this challenge. They introduced adapted photochemical methods to generate radicals and study their influence on the stability of anion exchange membranes independently of other degradation processes. The results were recently published in Membranes.
By irradiating aqueous potassium nitrite solutions or titanium oxide suspensions with UV light at 365 nm, hydroxyl radicals or a combination of hydroxyl and superoxide radicals were successfully generated. Tests on three commercial anion exchange membranes – PiperION®‑40 (PiperION), FM‑FAA‑3‑PK‑75 (Fumasep), and PNB‑R45 (Polynorbornene) – showed clear differences in durability. As expected, thinner, non‑reinforced membranes degraded faster than thicker, reinforced ones, likely due to the limited penetration depth of highly reactive radicals.
Both methods proved to be practical, affordable, and accessible tools for evaluating the stability of anion exchange membranes against radical attack. Photochemical radical generation was thus a viable way to study radical‑induced degradation under controlled conditions. The nitrite‑based approach selectively generated hydroxyl radicals, while titanium oxide suspensions produced both hydroxyl and superoxide radicals. Longer irradiation intensified membrane damage, clearly demonstrating the critical role of radicals in membrane decomposition. Experiments at pH 10 enabled differentiation between natural and radical‑driven causes.
Beyond laboratory use, both methods are also of industrial relevance. Combined with low‑cost laboratory equipment, they provide widely applicable and reproducible tools for evaluating commercial and prototype anion exchange membranes. By reducing costs and extending durability tests under realistic conditions, the development of robust anion exchange membranes for fuel cells and electrolyzers can be accelerated.
Frontis Energy is part of the mission to provide cost‑effective solutions for the development of efficient energy conversion technologies. In doing so, we strengthen the global transition to clean, resilient, and sustainable energy systems.
Solyom, P.; Nauser, T.; Nemeth, T. Photochemical Methods to Study the Radical-Induced Degradation of Anion-Exchange Membranes. Membranes 2025, 15, 305. https://doi.org/10.3390/membranes15100305






