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Solar-powered water electrolysis holds significant promise for the mass production of green hydrogen. However, the substantial water consumption associated with electrolysis not only increases the cost of green hydrogen but also raises critical concerns about accelerating water scarcity. Although seawater can serve as an infinite water supply for green hydrogen production, its complex composition poses substantial challenges to efficient and reliable electrolysis. Here, we demonstrate a high-efficiency solar-powered green hydrogen production from seawater. Our approach takes advantage of the full-spectrum utilization of solar energy. Photovoltaic electricity is used to drive the electrolysis, whereas the waste heat from solar cells is harnessed to produce clean water through seawater distillation. With natural sunlight and real seawater as the sole inputs, we experimentally demonstrate a 12.6% solar-to-hydrogen conversion efficiency and a 35.9 L m−2 h−1 production rate of green hydrogen under one-sun illumination, where additional 1.2 L m−2 h−1 clean water is obtained as a byproduct. By reducing reliance on clean water and electricity supplies, this work provides a fully sustainable strategy to access green hydrogen with favorable energy efficiency and technoeconomic feasibility.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available January 1, 2026
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