Engineered and published a new electrolyzer design for hydrogen production that shows a dramatic reduction in wear, supporting efforts toward affordable green hydrogen technologies, and offers new educational and industrial partnerships[2].
A partner in the Energy Biosciences Institute (EBI), the university's researchers were involved in the discovery of new metabolic pathways for biofuel production.
Researchers from this university have developed a new catalyst concept for hydrogen fuel cells that utilizes only the defective parts of platinum, potentially reducing costs.