Design, Program, Evolve: Engineering efficient electrochemical devices for a net-zero world

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Title
Design, Program, Evolve: Engineering efficient electrochemical devices for a net-zero world

CoPED ID
b2bf196e-a6c6-4b14-83ea-46d5f6fea610

Status
Active

Funder

Value
£1,987,343

Start Date
July 31, 2022

End Date
July 30, 2026

Description

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Electro-chemical devices (fuel cells, electrolysers etc) are at the forefront of the drive to a 'net-zero world' with hydrogen as an important energy storage medium and fuel for the application of sustainably derived electricity. Even with the projected development of the energy system towards a largely fossil-fuel free system, CO2 separation will continue to be required for chemical processes. The work proposed builds on the collaboration between the Universities on Manchester, Newcastle and UCL which has flourished over the past five years, to develop more efficient and robust technologies to achieve a carbon negative industrial landscape.

The ability to operate fuel cells at higher temperatures without humidification means that the amount of equipment needed and hence cost is reduced. It also means that potentially cheaper catalysts can be used, and the purity of the fuel does not need to be rigorously controlled, all of which leads to cheaper and more efficient systems. The overlap between fuel cells and electrolysers is very significant as an electrolyser is simply a fuel cell in reverse; as such similar problems are manifest. In addition, an exciting electrochemical process for gas separation (CO2 removal) is under development, again with significant overlap in terms of developmental challenges.

This proposal builds a team of researchers with complimentary skills to tackle the challenges highlighted. The synergies between the very high-level characterisation expertise to examine the processes taking place in the systems, coupled with the electro-chemical developments which are on-going, mean that development and optimisation can take place quickly with understanding being shared to tackle the overlapping nature of the obstacles to implementation of these vital technologies.

Stuart Holmes PI_PER
Paul Shearing COI_PER
Philip A Martin COI_PER
Thomas Miller COI_PER
Ian Metcalfe COI_PER
Sarah Haigh COI_PER
Greg Mutch COI_PER
Maria Perez-Page COI_PER
Daniel Brett COI_PER

Subjects by relevance
  1. Fuel cells
  2. Hydrogen
  3. Fuels
  4. Optimisation

Extracted key phrases
  1. Engineering efficient electrochemical device
  2. Fuel free system
  3. Fuel cell
  4. Efficient system
  5. Exciting electrochemical process
  6. Design
  7. Chemical development
  8. Energy system
  9. Important energy storage medium
  10. Program
  11. Co2 separation
  12. Significant overlap
  13. Evolve
  14. Net
  15. Carbon negative industrial landscape

Related Pages

UKRI project entry

UK Project Locations