Graphical
abstract. Credit: International Journal of Hydrogen Energy (2026). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijhydene.2025.152637
University
of Birmingham research published today has shown a new low-temperature method
for producing hydrogen that is suitable for both centralized hydrogen
production, and also local generation using waste heat from large-scale
industrial plants.
Hydrogen is the most abundant element in
the universe and is a clean and environmentally friendly energy carrier. Unlike
fossil fuels, which produce harmful emissions and carbon dioxide, it produces
only heat and water on combustion and can also power fuel cells that produce
electricity. But while hydrogen is carbon-free at the point of use, 95% of
current production relies on fossil fuels.
Thermochemical splitting, where a
catalyst splits water into hydrogen and oxygen, is emerging as a promising
method for hydrogen production. However, current catalysts split water at
700–1000oC and
need temperatures between 1300 and 1500oC to
regenerate between cycles of water-splitting.
Scientists led by Professor Yulong Ding
from the University's School of Chemical Engineering have demonstrated it is
possible to reduce the temperature by 500oC by
using a perovskite catalyst.
Professor
Yulong Ding demonstrated thermochemical splitting, where a catalyst splits
water into hydrogen and oxygen, at relatively low temperatures. Credit:
University of Birmingham
Their research, published in
the International Journal of Hydrogen Energy, showed the catalyst can produce substantial yields
of hydrogen in a temperature range of 150-500oC, and be regenerated at temperatures between 700 and 1000oC.
Professor Ding said, "The
lower overall temperature of the process could enable hydrogen to be produced
near renewable energy generation plants, and foundation industry sectors such
as steel, cement, glass and chemicals have an abundance of waste heat, which could be harnessed as the heat input for
low-temperature hydrogen production. If the hydrogen is used locally, this
would overcome the obstacles presented by storage and transport, so enabling
the uptake of hydrogen fuel without the need for costly infrastructure."
A provisional cost-competitiveness analysis has shown water splitting with the perovskite
catalyst can deliver hydrogen at a lower cost than either green hydrogen (produced from water by electrolysis) or blue
hydrogen (produced from methane with carbon capture and storage). The cost
advantage was most pronounced in regions with low renewable energy tariffs,
such as Australia.
The research was conducted during a
collaboration with the University of Science and Technology Beijing (USTB) and
is being commercialized in the UK and Europe by the University of Birmingham.
University of Birmingham Enterprise has filed a patent application covering the
use of BNCF catalysts for splitting water at low temperatures and is currently
seeking development partners to advance this promising approach.
Why thermochemical splitting?
Hydrogen is the most abundant
element in the universe but is relatively rare on Earth in the form of pure
hydrogen gas. It is primarily found bound in other molecules, most commonly
water and hydrocarbons such as natural gas containing mostly methane, coal or
oil. These molecules need to be split into their constituent parts to produce
hydrogen.
The most widely used method for
hydrogen production involves splitting methane through steam reforming. This accounts for nearly half of H2 produced today, but produces CO2 as a biproduct, undermining its potential as a carbon-free energy
source, unless it is coupled with carbon capture and storage.
Electrolysis is a greener method of
producing H2, but it is in competition with the cheaper hydrogen
generated by methane splitting, and consequently only delivers ~4% of the H2 supplied. Photonic methods use light to drive the chemical conversion
of water into hydrogen, but are in their infancy, and face significant
challenges in efficiency, scalability, and cost-effectiveness.
About the perovskite catalyst
Perovskites are lattice-like
materials that can absorb oxygen molecules into their structure, and split
oxygen-containing molecules into their constituent parts.
While
perovskites come in many forms, the researchers concentrated on those made from
barium, niobium, calcium and iron (BNCF perovskites), which are readily
available, and do not require complex synthesis, or contain toxic ingredients.
Their research
demonstrated that BNCF perovskites accept oxygen into their structures at
substantially lower temperatures than previously believed. A perovskite called
BNCF100 was found to be the optimum formulation, and the study confirmed the
catalyst can be regenerated at lower temperatures than current water-splitting
catalysts, and retain its ability to produce hydrogen over 10 cycles of
production. X-ray diffraction showed little sign of structural change in the
catalyst throughout.
Professor Ding said, "Our research revealed a catalyst capable of producing substantial yields of hydrogen at relatively low temperatures, and a preliminary techno-economic study shows it is cost-effective compared to the established blue and green pathways for hydrogen production."
Source: Water-splitting catalyst unlocks cheaper hydrogen at significantly lower temperatures


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