H2NEW Contributors Featured Prominently in ECS Interface Magazine Hydrogen's Big Shot
The Winter 2021 issue of The Electrochemical Society (ECS) Interface featured several articles co-authored by Hydrogen from Next-Generation Electrolysis of Water (H2NEW) consortium researchers.
Interface magazine is a quarterly publication that includes technical articles about the latest developments in the solid-state, electrochemical science and technology fields. The “Hydrogen’s Big Shot” issue highlights work on advanced electrolyzer technologies from the H2NEW and HydroGEN Advanced Water Splitting Materials consortia, including advancing anion exchange membrane (AEM) electrolysis, reducing proton-exchange membrane (PEM) stack capital costs to $100/kW, addressing R&D needs for oxygen-ion conducting solid oxide electrolyzers (o-SOECs), and developing comprehensive accelerated stress tests (ASTs).
The following articles include contributions by H2NEW leadership, researchers, advisory board members, and DOE sponsors:
Hydrogen’s Big Shot
by Nemanja Danilovic, Iryna Zenyuk
Ten Questions for Kelly J. Speakes-Backman
by Julie C. Fornaciari
Chalkboard 2 – How to Make Clean Hydrogen AWSM: The Advanced Water Splitting Materials
Consortium
by Shaun Alia, Dong Ding, Anthony McDaniel, Francesca M. Toma, Huyen N. Dinh
Hydrogen: Targeting $1/kg in 1 Decade
by Bryan S. Pivovar, Mark F. Ruth, Deborah J. Myers, Huyen N. Dinh
PEM Electrolysis, a Forerunner for Clean Hydrogen
by Kathy Ayers, Nemanja Danilovic, Kevin Harrison, Hui Xu
Hydrogen is Essential for Industry and Transportation Decarbonization
by Rod Borup, Ted Krause, Jack Brouwer
Getting Hydrogen to the Gigaton Scale
by Bryan S. Pivovar, Mark F. Ruth, Akihiro Nakano, Hirohide Furutani, Christopher
Hebling, Tom Smolinka
H2NEW is focused on enabling affordable, reliable, and efficient electrolyzers to help reduce the cost of clean hydrogen production to $2/kg H2 by 2026 and pave the way toward meeting DOE’s Hydrogen Shot goal of $1/kg H2 in one decade.
Read more clean hydrogen perspectives in the Electrochemical Society (ECS) Interface Winter 2021 Issue.