25 August 2023
By Erin Kilgore
The world’s cheapest green hydrogen
will likely come from a NewHydrogen innovation
Article
Discusses:
-
NewHydrogen,
Inc. partners with UC Santa Barbara for green hydrogen research.
-
Thermochemical
approach used, employing heat instead of electricity.
-
The method could
lower costs compared to traditional electrolysis methods.
-
The technology
involves using molten liquids in a single redox chemical loop.
-
The system,
named NewHydrogen ThermoLoop™, aims for high efficiency and low
temperatures.
-
The company
believes the technology could disrupt the hydrogen industry by
reducing production costs significantly.
The California company is improving H2 production
efficiency with its disruptive tech.
NewHydrogen, Inc. (OTC: NEWH)
announced it has entered a research agreement with University of
California, Santa Barbara and is working with a team of UC Santa
Barbara experts to develop a more efficient way to split water into
cheap green hydrogen using a thermochemical approach.
The groundbreaking technology uses heat instead of
electricity to generate hydrogen.
The thermochemical approach uses
heat instead of electricity to split water into hydrogen and oxygen.
This method is different from the conventional approach of producing
green hydrogen, which is via electrolysis by using electrolyzers with
renewable energy, such as solar or wind, to split water into hydrogen
and oxygen.
The trouble with the conventional
approach is that green electricity is very expensive and is the main
cost contributor of producing green H2.
According to NewHydrogen CEO
Steve Hill, “electricity currently accounts for 73% of the cost of
green hydrogen production.”
Hill explained in a NewHydrogen press
release that unlike renewable electricity, renewable heat sourced from
geothermal or concentrated solar can be much cheaper. “Often it’s even
free in the form of waste heat from sources such as nuclear power
plants, and industrial processes for making steel, glass, ceramics,
and many things we use in our everyday lives,” Hill stated.
The UC Santa Barbara tech team plans to use molten
liquids to produce green hydrogen.
The UC Santa Barbara technology
team working with NewHydrogen on the cheap green hydrogen project is a
team of world-class chemical and materials engineers, led by Dr.
Philip Christopher.
Hill revealed that the research
team intends to exploit the features of molten liquids to directly and
continuously split water in a single redox chemical loop, to generate
hydrogen and oxygen in separate chambers.
“We are developing
a novel Molten Catalytic Liquid that can be reduced in one chamber,
oxidized in
another chamber, and is continuously recycled and reused. The only
inputs are heat and water,” Hill said.
The technology is called NewHydrogen ThermoLoop™.
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