High Performance, Low Cost Hydrogen Generation from Renewable Energy
Author(s) -
Katherine E. Ayers,
Luke Dalton,
Andy B. Roemer,
Blake Carter,
Mike Niedzwiecki,
Judith Manco,
Everett B. Anderson,
Chris Capuano,
Chaoyang Wang,
Wei Zhao
Publication year - 2013
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/1117668
Subject(s) - proton exchange membrane fuel cell , renewable energy , process engineering , cost reduction , hydrogen production , stack (abstract data type) , electrolysis , membrane electrode assembly , environmental science , engineering , waste management , hydrogen , computer science , fuel cells , electrical engineering , chemistry , chemical engineering , electrode , business , anode , marketing , electrolyte , programming language , organic chemistry
Renewable hydrogen from proton exchange membrane (PEM) electrolysis is gaining strong interest in Europe, especially in Germany where wind penetration is already at critical levels for grid stability. For this application as well as biogas conversion and vehicle fueling, megawatt (MW) scale electrolysis is required. Proton has established a technology roadmap to achieve the necessary cost reductions and manufacturing scale up to maintain U.S. competitiveness in these markets. This project represents a highly successful example of the potential for cost reduction in PEM electrolysis, and provides the initial stack design and manufacturing development for Proton’s MW scale product launch. The majority of the program focused on the bipolar assembly, from electrochemical modeling to subscale stack development through prototyping and manufacturing qualification for a large active area cell platform. Feasibility for an advanced membrane electrode assembly (MEA) with 50% reduction in catalyst loading was also demonstrated. Based on the progress in this program and other parallel efforts, H2A analysis shows the status of PEM electrolysis technology dropping below $3.50/kg production costs, exceeding the 2015 target.
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