How Can Hydrogen Gas Be Produced Cheaply and Safely?

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The discussion centers on finding a cost-effective method for producing hydrogen gas (H2) using an electrolytic cell powered by a variable voltage source. The user plans to utilize distilled water but seeks an efficient electrolyte to enhance the process without relying solely on water self-ionization. The electrolytes considered include sulfuric acid (H2SO4), hydrochloric acid (HCl), potassium hydroxide (KOH), and sodium hydroxide (NaOH). There is a consensus against using HCl due to the potential release of chlorine gas. Sulfuric acid is noted for its ability to produce peroxodisulfate ions at low voltages, although electrolysis requires at least 1.23V. KOH is recognized for its role in heavy water extraction, but NaOH is favored for its similar properties and lower cost. The discussion emphasizes the need for a safe and effective electrolyte that minimizes toxic byproducts while maximizing hydrogen production.
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I am trying to work out a method of producing hydrogen gas (H2) cheaply. What I have so far is an electrolytic cell with carbon electrodes from a dry-cell battery powered by an A/C-D/C wall converter with output from 1.5V to 12V. I plan on using distilled water, but I don't want to rely on the water self-ionizing to split the molecules as this would take a VERY long time. The electrolytes I've looked at so far are sulfuric acid (H2SO4), hydrochloric acid (HCl), potassium hydroxide (KOH), and sodium hydroxide (NaOH). I'd like to use something relatively cheap and unlikely to produce poisonous gases (ie, Cl2) and production of oxygen would be a plus. Any suggestions?
 
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Go for sulfuric acid or one of hydroxides. HCl is out of the question.

If you start with NaCl you will initially get some chlorine, later you will be left with just a hydroxide solution.

If you start with HCl, once all chlorine is removed from the solution, you are left with just pure water.
 
Thanks, I figured HCl might do that.
Sulfuric acid (I believe) will produce peroxodisulfate ions at less than 1V, but electrolysis of water takes at least 1.23V.
I know KOH is used in the extraction of heavy water, but I don't know what else it produces, if anything. If I do decide on the hydroxide, though, I think I'll use NaOH because the chemical properties are similar and it's a bit cheaper.
 
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