Automakers using know-how to accelerate the uptake of platinum-based fuel cell systems

17th March 2021 By: Simone Liedtke - Creamer Media Social Media Editor & Senior Writer

While it is widely accepted that for hydrogen to fulfil its potential in enabling the clean energy transition, collaboration is essential and a recent report by the Hydrogen Council talks of the need to accelerate product and solution development, while acknowledging that this will require new partnerships and ecosystem building.

With both businesses and governments playing important roles, the Toyota Motor Corporation, which already allows royalty-free use of its fuel cell electric vehicle (FCEV) patent licences, has demonstrated how this might work in practice, says the World Platinum Investment Council (WPIC) in a newsletter published on March 17.

Automotive hydrogen fuel cells in FCEVs are almost always proton exchange membrane (PEM) fuel cells which contain platinum catalyst layers, and there is a targeted growth in the total number of FCEVs on roads in China, the US, Europe and Japan – cumulatively and inclusive of commercial and passenger vehicles – which is expected to rise from tens of thousands in 2020 to over 11-million by 2030.

According to the WPIC, this means that the demand for platinum in FCEVs based on this growth is expected to increase yearly platinum demand in 2030 by well over one-million ounces (31 t), or over 10% of current yearly demand.

Leveraging off the knowledge and expertise it has cultivated through its decades-long development of FCEVs, including the Mirai passenger vehicle and the SORA bus, WPIC refers to Toyota, which has developed a product that packages a fuel cell system into a compact module. It plans to begin selling the module later this year in a bid to promote and scale-up hydrogen use and help the world achieve carbon neutrality goals.

Considered a leader in hydrogen fuel cell technologies, Toyota identified a growing demand for ‘off the shelf’ fuel cell systems that can easily be adapted by companies across a range of industries for use in their own products, and its new hydrogen fuel cell module packages individual fuel cell system-related elements from the second-generation Mirai.

This includes the fuel cell stack and components for air and hydrogen supply, cooling and power control. The module can be easily used in many different applications, the WPIC notes, including mobility (buses, trucks, trains and ships) and stationary generators.

“Modularisation significantly improves convenience, while the new system offers world-class, top-level output density per unit volume while only needing relatively simple and infrequent maintenance,” the council comments.

Similarly, Hyundai Motor Group is also taking proprietary hydrogen fuel cell know-how to the market through its ‘HTWO’ (derived from ‘H2’ or ‘Hydrogen and Humanity’) fuel cell system brand.

Launched at the end of last year, HTWO aims to facilitate Hyundai’s global fuel cell business and grow the hydrogen ecosystem. 

In addition, the Volvo Group and Daimler Truck are collaborating to develop, produce and commercialise fuel-cell systems for use in heavy-duty trucks, as well as other applications, through the formation of a joint venture to be named ‘cellcentric’. 

“The ambition of both partners is to make the new company a leading global manufacturer of fuel cells, and thus help the world take a major step towards climate-neutral and sustainable transportation by 2050,” notes the WPIC.