decarbonfuse Icons/logo

Press Release

New Low-cost Catalyst Helps Produce Environmentally Sustainable Hydrogen From Water

Published by Todd Bush on June 6, 2023

LEMONT, Ill.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--A team led by the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory has developed a new catalyst composed of elements abundant in the Earth. It could make possible the low-cost and energy-efficient production of hydrogen for use in transportation and industrial applications. Clean hydrogen could not only propel vehicles with no emitted pollutants but also help decarbonize industrial processes.

Other contributors to the project include DOE’s Sandia National Laboratories and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, as well as Giner Inc.

hydrogen from water

hydrogen from water

>> In Other News: Labor Calls on Governor, Legislature to Invest in Hydrogen Infrastructure

Proton exchange membrane (PEM) electrolyzers represent a new generation of technology for hydrogen production. They can split water into hydrogen and oxygen with high efficiency at near room temperature. The reduced energy demand makes them an ideal choice for producing clean hydrogen by using renewable but intermittent sources, such as solar and wind.

This electrolyzer runs with separate catalysts for each of its electrodes (cathode and anode). The cathode catalyst yields hydrogen, while the anode catalyst forms oxygen. A problem is that the anode catalyst uses iridium, which has a current market price of around $5,000 per ounce. The lack of supply and high cost of iridium pose a major barrier for widespread adoption of PEM electrolyzers. The main ingredient in the team’s new catalyst is cobalt, which is substantially cheaper than iridium.

Giner Inc., a leading research and development company working toward commercialization of electrolyzers and fuel cells, evaluated the new catalyst using its PEM electrolyzer test stations under industrial operating conditions. The performance and durability far exceeded that of competitors’ catalysts.

The team’s achievement is a step forward in DOE’s Hydrogen Energy Earthshot initiative, which mimics the U.S. space program’s “Moon Shot” of the 1960s. Its ambitious goal is to lower the cost for green hydrogen production to one dollar per kilogram in a decade. Production of green hydrogen at that cost could reshape the nation’s economy. Applications include the electric grid, manufacturing, transportation and residential and commercial heating.

Icons/external Source

Add Comments

Subscribe to the newsletter

Icons/inbox check

Daily decarbonization data and news delivered to your inbox

Follow the money flow of climate, technology, and energy investments to uncover new opportunities and jobs.


Latest issues

  • California Utilities Want to Skip 5% Hydrogen Demos

    Inside This Issue 🔧 Utilities Seek to Bypass Low-Level Hydrogen Blending Demo, Citing Proven Safety 🌍 EU Sets World’s First Voluntary Standard for Permanent Carbon Removals ✈️ Cathay Achieves Anot...

  • Three US Firms Just Formed a SAF Giant

    Inside This Issue 🛫 New US Powerhouse: XCF Global, DevvStream & Southern Merge for SAF Scale ⛏️ Carbon Capture, ‘Rare Earth’ From Coal Among Projects Poised to Get $11.7M in State Grants 🗺️ Ca...

  • Why Bill Gates Bet $40M on This Carbon Capture Lab

    Inside This Issue 🧪 Why Bill Gates Bet $40M on This Carbon Capture Lab ⛏️ Max Power Prepares to Drill Second Natural Hydrogen Well as Program Expands 325 km SW of Lawson Discovery 💰 Trafigura-Back...

View all issues

Company Announcements

Daily decarbonization data and news delivered to your inbox

Follow the money flow of climate, technology, and energy investments to uncover new opportunities and jobs.

Subscribe illustration