The ionic liquids are increasingly used as versatile media capable of reshaping the electrochemical environment for hydrogen production. Their wide electrochemical windows, thermal stability, and customizable solvation structures enable these liquids to tailor the electrode–electrolyte interface in such a way that the traditional alkaline and polymer-membrane systems cannot. These features allow for reductions in the hydrogen evolution overpotentials, improved catalyst stability, and effective suppression of gas crossover, positioning the ionic liquids as promising components for advanced electrolysis systems. Despite these benefits, their broader deployment remains constrained by certain challenges. The elevated viscosity and associated mass-transport limitations complicate the cell design and energy efficiency, whereas the cost and long-term stability of many ionic liquids limit their competitiveness in industrial hydrogen production. Also, the hydrolysable anions and other reactive species increase the burden, particularly in environments where moisture and anodic potential are present. As a result, the ionic liquids electrolysis has its most promising prospects in niche and hybrid configurations like the renewable integrated systems and configurations where the tailored interfacial chemistry and long operational lifetimes outweigh the investment cost and maintenance requirements. Future progress will depend on the development of greener, task-specific ionic liquids with improved stability and lower synthesis costs, alongside hybrid electrolyte designs that balance the unique interfacial benefits of ionic liquids with the practicality of aqueous systems. Advancing these materials from laboratory research to large-scale sustainable hydrogen production will require coordinated advances in the materials compatibility, device and infrastructural architecture, and techno-economic optimization.
Pereira et al. (Mon,) studied this question.