Mission Hydrogen | Free Webinar
Advances in Alkaline Water Electrolysis
Free Webinar
Feburary 15, 2023 - 4 pm in Berlin, 10 am in New York, 11 pm in Beijing
Alkaline electrolyzers are the most mature technology to produce green hydrogen.
Advantages of alkaline electrolyzers are:
- Robustness
- Cost-effective catalysts and materials
- Bankability due to many years of experience
- High reliability
- Scalability
- etc.
Disadvantages of alkaline electrolyzers compared to PEM are:
- Lower efficiency
- Lower dynamics
- Alkaline electrolyte solution (potassium hydroxide)
- etc.
Studies and scientific publications do not yet provide a clear picture of the market share that alkaline electrolyzers will have in the future. In particular, the TCO and the cost per hydrogen produced still depend on too many factors.
A leading expert on alkaline electrolyzers is Prof. Dr. Lars Röntzsch from the Brandenburg University of Technology, Germany. He has 20 years of experience in materials research for energy storage and hydrogen technology and is considered a top authority in the field.
In this webinar you will learn the following:
- How does alkaline electrolysis work?
- What efficiency and lifetime can be achieved today?
- What advances are there in research?
- What will be realistic in 5-10 years?
- Where will alkaline electrolysis make sense (compared to PEM)?
- Etc.
As always, you will have the opportunity to ask your questions in the Q&A session.
Sponsors of the Mission Hydrogen Webinar Series:
GOLD: Cummins, Hexagon Purus, NEUMAN & ESSER GROUP, Wenger Engineering GmbH | Wenger Hydrogen GmbH
Silver: Atlas Copco, Burckhardt Compression AG, Dräger Safety, Hydrogenious LOHC Technologies, MSA – The Safety Company, Siemens AG, thyssenkrupp nucera, VOSS Holding GmbH + Co. KG, Wenger Engineering GmbH
Bronze: Nitto, PHOENIX CONTACT, REFIRE, Siren Energy
Partners: Germany Trade and Invest GTAI, NOW GmbH
Prof. Dr. Lars Röntzsch
Head of the Hydrogen Research Center, Brandenburg University of Technology
Dr. David Wenger
Webinar Host, CEO, Mission Hydrogen