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Moving closer to reality: a scalable and low-cost green hydrogen electrolysis technology

The HYScale team is happy to announce a series of technical breakthroughs that bring cost competitive, industrial scale green hydrogen production a decisive step closer to reality.

At the core of every low‑temperature water‑electrolysis system lies the membrane, a critical component for efficiency, safety, and scalability. HYScale coordinator Cutting‑Edge Nanomaterials GmbH (CENmat) has now successfully upscaled the synthesis and casting of its proprietary AionFLX™ anion exchange membranes (AEMs).

The new process delivers:

  • dramatically reduced hydrogen permeability, resolving a long-standing performance bottleneck in AEM electrolysis.
  • batch volumes sufficient for a 100 kW stack, eliminating membrane supply as a scale up constraint.

“We have moved beyond laboratory production; membranes are no longer the bottleneck,” said Dr. Julien Fage, polymer chemist and project coordinator at CENmat. “This scalability opens the door to multi‑kilowatt and soon multi‑megawatt systems.”

Building on the membrane advance, HYScale partners have fabricated large area, critical-raw-material free catalyst coated substrates (CCSs) for both anode and cathode, ensuring that all primary stack materials are available at industrial scale and meet stringent performance targets.

An AEM membrane being sliced. Source: CENmat for HYScale
6 kW short stack validates integrated design

To verify real world functionality, Nicola Briguglio, PhD Material Engineer at the National Research Council of Italy (CNR-ITAE) designed, built, and operated with his team a 6 kW AEM short stack using the new membranes and CCSs.

The stack demonstrated stable operation across a wide range of temperatures, and current densities; proof that HYScale’s materials can be combined into robust, application ready membrane electrode assemblies (MEAs).

Design of 100 kW demonstrator completed

Leveraging data from the short stack tests, the German Aerospace Center (DLR) has finalised the digital design of a 100 kW HYScale stack demonstrator.

The model details dimensioning and material selection, providing a firm blueprint for construction and paving the way to Technology Readiness Level 5 (TRL 5).

“HYScale is uniquely positioned to deliver scalable, mass‑manufacturable solutions for green hydrogen,” said Jagoda Manss‑Chmielarz, R&D engineer at DLR. “Our focus is not only on better materials, but on making them work in real‑life production environments.”

HYScale’s integrated approach accelerates Europe’s transition toward affordable green hydrogen, supporting the EU’s climate and energy goals.

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