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HydroliteAEM Fuel Cell Technology for Hydrogen Power Conversion

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Hydrolite focuses on advancing AEM (Anion Exchange Membrane) fuel cell technology, which employs hydrogen and ambient oxygen to produce electricity. This process is fundamentally different from traditional combustion engines, as it converts chemical energy directly to electrical energy, with heat as a by-product, without involving thermal conversion. At the heart of this technology is the Membrane-Electrode Assembly (MEA), comprising layers including a gas diffusion layer and a catalyst layer, surrounding a central anion exchange membrane. In a fuel cell stack, multiple cells are electrically interconnected to enhance power output, with demonstration systems achieving up to 5 kW. The broader Hydrogen-to-Power system integrates thermal and fluidic subsystems alongside electronic interfaces for standalone power generation. The technology promises economic advantages by minimizing critical material costs while maintaining the benefits of membrane fuel cells, targeting future applications in the hydrogen economy and supporting decarbonization goals.

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AEM Fuel Cell Technology and Use of Hydrogen

A Hydrogen Fuel Cell uses oxygen from the air to generate electrical energy from the chemical energy stored in hydrogen, while generating a chemical product (water). The process differs from a combustion engine in that the primary conversion is from chemical energy directly to electrical energy, rather than heat, while heat is also generated as a by-product:

2H2(g) + O2(g) ⇒ 2H2O(l) + Electrical Energy + Heat

Fuel cell devices are designed to perform this reaction effectively while harnessing the electrical energy output. The device technology is developed at several levels described below.

The Membrane-Electrode Assembly (MEA):

The fuel cell is configured to separate the two input gases and directs them separately to anode (hydrogen) and cathode (air) electrodes to generate an electrical potential from which a current can be drawn:

Each electrode normally consists of 2 layers: a gas diffusion layer (GDL) and a catalyst layer, placed on either side of the Anion exchange membrane (AEM) at the heart of the device. These combined 5 layers are referred to as the Membrane-Electrode Assembly (MEA). Conductive current collectors placed against the two sides of the MEA are normally metallic plates, and these are inscribed with hollow channels called flow fields, through which the reacting gases are introduced to the cell, and the product water removed. 

The Fuel Cell Stack

A series of individual cells are combined to increase device power output. This device is called the Fuel Cell Stack. In the fuel cell stack, the cells are generally connected electrically in series, while the reactant and product flows are supplied to the cells via manifolds connecting the cells in parallel.

The fuel cell MEA and stack are the core technologies that HYDROLITE has developed and demonstrated up to 5 kW of gross power output. Further scaling is a simple matter of adding more cells to the stack assembly.

The Hydrogen-to-Power System

In addition to the fuel cell stack, a hydrogen-to-power system includes electrical, thermal and fluidic control subsystems and an electronic interface to generate standalone power delivery that must be tailored to the size of the fuel cell stack. HYDROLITE is currently deploying a 5kW delivery system to serve as a first AEM device platform. Such a system can then also be scaled/redesigned to control a fuel cell stack or module of arbitrary size.

Cost Advantages of AEMFC Technology

Multiple critical materials cost drivers are eliminated with HYDROLITE AEM Device Technology, while retaining the performance advantages of exchange membrane fuel cells. Our technology is set to help enable the rapid emergence of a Hydrogen Economy towards deep decarbonization over the coming decades.