Solid Oxide Electrolysis: A Technology Status Assessment
Solid Oxide Electrolysis: A Technology Status Assessment
A Technology Status
Assessment
Lead Author:
Gniewomir Flis, Hydrogen and Clean Energy Technologies Consultant
Contributing Author:
Ghassan Wakim, Hydrogen Technology Director
November 2023
Executive Summary
This report provides a summary assessment of the of SOECs over other electrolyzer architectures, such
state of solid oxide electrolysis technology. In contrast as polymer electrolyte membrane (PEM), alkaline, or
to other, more widely commercialized electrolyzer anion exchange membrane (AEM), is predicated on the
options, such as polymer membrane or alkaline cells, ability to access an external source of process heat.
Without an external source of heat for steam generation,
solid oxide electrolyzer cells (SOECs) operate at much
the potential 20% efficiency advantage of solid oxide
higher temperatures. This feature confers potential
systems over future competing electrolyzer architectures
efficiency advantages, which are of interest in light of largely disappears.
strong expected future demand for clean hydrogen
4. High-temperature operation is a double edged sword:
production using clean electricity powered electrolysis.
it increases electrolyzer efficiency on the one hand but
But high-temperature operation and other features of
due to thermal stresses increases the probability of
SOEC systems also pose challenges. Several key points accelerated stack failure on the other. New materials,
emerge from this assessment: advances in manufacturing techniques, and growing
1. The maturity of solid oxide electrolysis technology is manufacturer and operator experience, including with
solid oxide fuel cells, a closely related technology, have
underestimated. But SOEC manufacturers still have
led to vastly improved durability.
a critical hurdle to clear on the path to successful
commercialization: scaling their product offerings 5. Wider SOEC deployment has been held back, not only by
from small modules, with capacity in the single-digit the perception that the technology is immature, but also
megawatts, to large systems with capacities well into because demand for electrolyzers in general has been
the hundreds of megawatts. limited until recently. Responding to growing interest in
decarbonization options, particularly for hard to electrify
2. The capability to manufacture SOECs is not a bottleneck
sectors, some solid oxide technology vendors have
to the wider deployment of this technology – in fact,
begun adding an electrolyzer product to their offerings.
gigawatt-scale manufacturing could be built up in 18 to
Industrial customers that are already using hydrogen,
36 months. As with any technology, supply chains need
including chemical plant and refinery operators, are
to be managed prudently, but there is no shortage of
actively looking at SOECs. Solid oxide electrolysis is also
raw materials.
of strong potential interest to up-and-coming companies
3. The types of industrial facilities that are well suited for that are pursuing synthetic fuel production and new
integration with SOEC include ammonia, chemical, and nuclear energy technologies, but these potential partners
steel plants, as well as refineries. The chief advantage have yet to establish a substantial commercial presence.
1 Introduction..............................................................................................................4
5.4 Key Input Materials and Potential Supply Chain Bottlenecks .................................... 45
Introduction
Hydrogen has been widely discussed as an option for to the achievement of net-zero goals, two challenges
decarbonizing sectors where direct electrification or must be overcome: hydrogen production must be scaled
other low-carbon options might not be practical, or up dramatically, and it must be decarbonized at the
even feasible at all. Examples of such sectors include same time.
the chemical and fertilizer industries, steelmaking,
synthetic fuel production for long-distance shipping Two main pathways for decarbonizing hydrogen
and aviation, and long-term energy storage. For these production are technologically available and
sectors, hydrogen offers several potential advantages: scalable today:
It can be produced with low emissions from a variety of 1. Production from fossil fuel feedstocks with carbon capture
feedstocks using a variety of methods, it emits no carbon (at CO2 capture rates greater than 90%) and strict
dioxide (CO2) at the point of use, and it is versatile and upstream methane controls.
can be used in a range of applications. 2. Production using electrolysis powered with low-carbon
electricity.
Today, hydrogen is already produced on a large scale,
primarily for use as an industrial feedstock in fertilizer The term “electrolysis” describes a process in which an
production and to refine oil products, among other electrical current is used to split molecules. Theoretically,
applications. Decarbonization efforts, however, could this can be done with many types of molecules, but water
substantially increase global demand for hydrogen. electrolysis – in which water molecules are split into their
The International Energy Agency (IEA) has estimated that constituent oxygen and hydrogen elements – is the focus
future hydrogen demand could soar more than five-fold, of this report and of most efforts to develop electrolysis
from approximately 90 million tonnes per year at present technology. Water electrolysis can deliver low-emissions
to as much as 500 million tonnes per year by 2050. hydrogen if powered entirely with low-carbon electricity.
In addition to its carbon-reduction benefits, some
Unfortunately, virtually all hydrogen produced today – more countries see this hydrogen production pathway as
than 99% – is made from fossil fuels or uses fossil fuel an opportunity to break their dependence on fossil
energy inputs, without carbon abatement. As a result, it fuel imports. Electrolysis-based, low-carbon hydrogen
is relatively carbon intensive. For hydrogen to contribute production could also provide system integration
500
Other
400
Power generation
H2 based fuels
300
Mt H2
Transport
Industry
200
Refining
100
0
2022 2030 2035 2040 2045 2050
OIL, COAL, NATURAL GAS OIL, COAL, NATURAL GAS RENEWABLES NUCLEAR
CO2
Oxygen(O2)
CO2 Natural
Reforming
Gas H2 Electricity
Natural with CCS Electrolysis H2
(CH4)
Gas Reforming H2 Heat
(CH4) (for SOEC)
CO2
Water(H2O)
1
IEA (2021). Net Zero by 2050: A Roadmap for the Global Energy Sector. https://www.iea.org/reports/net-zero-by-2050
2
For example, the use of excess wind and solar generation to power electrolysis facilities during periods of high wind and solar availability
could help stabilize the grid and create storable energy (in the form of hydrogen fuel) that could potentially be used during periods of low
renewables availability.
3
Odenweller, A., Ueckerdt, F., Nemet, G.F. et al. (2022). Probabilistic feasibility space of scaling up green hydrogen supply. Nat Energy 7,
854–865. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41560-022-01097-4
4
Two more electrolyzer architectures are considered emerging: membrane-less electrolysis, developed by companies like CPH2 or
Supercritical, and E-T developed by H2Pro.
5
Renewable Hydrogen: Modular Concepts from Production over Storage to the Consumer - Scientific Figure on ResearchGate. Available from:
https://www.researchgate.net/figure/Comparison-of-the-electrolysis-technologies-PEMEL-AEMEL-AEL-and-HTEL-based-on-11_fig2_349090866
6
Elaborated further in Section 3.1 of this report.
1/2O2 H2 H2 H2
H2 H+ OH- O2- 1/2O2
OH- 1/2O2 1/2O2
H2O H2O
H2O H2O
Ni/ Ni-YSZ/
Pt/C Ir/IrO2 Ni Ni/Co/Fe Ni Ni/Co/Fe Ceramics Solid O2- Cermet
Membrane Membrane Diaphragm / Conducter
Nafion® KOH
Fumapem® FFA
Operating
50°C–80°C 40°C–80°C 60°C–95°C 500°C–900°C
Temperature
Leading
Manufacturers
e- + H+ + O2 H2O CO2 O2
e+ Anode
e- + O2 O2-
H2O CO
Application
7
Zheng, Y., Chen, Z. & Zhang, J. (2021). Solid Oxide Electrolysis of H2O and CO2 to Produce Hydrogen and Low-Carbon Fuels. Electrochem.
Energ. Rev. 4, 508–517. https://doi.org/10.1007/s41918-021-00097-4
8
More information on pilot and demonstration projects is provided in Section 4 of this report.
9
That is, with the same crystal lattice structure as perovskite, or calcium titanate (CaTiO3).
10
Ivanova, M. E., et al. (2023). Technological Pathways to produce compressed and highly pure hydrogen from solar power.
Angewandte Chemie International Edition, 62(32). https://doi.org/10.1002/anie.202218850
H2
Interconnect Porous cathode, nickel cermet
H2/H2O → Cathode stream → H2/H2O 4e- 2H2O + 4e → 2H2 + 2O2-
H2O
Unit
Solid structure
cell
~ 1 mm
N2/O2 → Anode stream → N2/O2
2O2- Gastight electrolyte, YSZ or ScSZ
Interconnect
Figure 5: (A) Square Solid Oxide Stack; (B) Upsizing the Power of a Solid Oxide System by Stacking Cells and
Combining Stacks into Modules12
Notes: Prioritize the rest of the set before starting on this one
A
100W 1 kw 10 kw 100 kw
11
Idaho National Lab. 2019. Evaluation of Hydrogen Production Feasibility for a Light Water Reactor in the Midwest.
https://inldigitallibrary.inl.gov/sites/sti/sti/Sort_18785.pdf
12
Wachsman, E. D., & Lee, K. T. (2011). Lowering the Temperature of Solid Oxide Fuel Cells. Science. https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/
science.1204090
O2 Vented out
Evaporator
Stack
Hydrogen
Oxygen
Water
Transformer Rectifier
13
International Renewable Energy Agency. (2020). Green Hydrogen Cost Reduction: Scaling Up Electrolysers to Meet the 1.5C Climate Goal.
https://www.irena.org/-/media/Files/IRENA/Agency/Publication/2020/Dec/IRENA_Green_hydrogen_cost_2020.pdf
SEC Electrolyzer System SOEC Electrolyzer Module Mid Size CSA Stack Stack Module Assembled
Larger
Installations
5-25 MW
solution
C D
14
Ghezel-Ayaagh, H. (2021). Performance Improvements for Reversible Solid Oxide Fuel Cell Systems [PowerPoint slides].
Fuelcellenergy. https://netl.doe.gov/sites/default/files/netl-file/21SOFC_Ghezel-Ayagh17.pdf
15
Ouimet, R. J., Glenn, J. R., De Porcellinis, D., Motz, A. R., Carmo, M., & Ayers, K. E. (2022). The role of electrocatalysts in the development
of gigawatt-scale PEM electrolyzers. ACS Catalysis, 12(10), 6159–6171. https://doi.org/10.1021/acscatal.2c00570
16
Cummins Inc. (2021). Hydrogen: The Next Generation. Columbus, IN; Cummins Inc. Retrieved from
https://www.cummins.com/sites/default/files/2021-08/cummins-hydrogen-generation-brochure-20210603.pdf
17
# AEM Multicore. Enapter Handbook. (n.d.). https://handbook.enapter.com/electrolyser/aem_multicore/aem_multicore.html
18
Grinhy2.0. SALCOS®. (n.d.). https://salcos.salzgitter-ag.com/en/grinhy-20.html
Figure 9: John Cockerill’s 5 MW-Alkaline Stack (right) Connected to its Balance of Plant
SOFC Stack
Power Generation Stack Module
Only runs in power generation
mode on a wide range of fuels,
including natural gas, biofuels,
propane, and hydrogen 200kW Power Generation System
19
Ghezel-Ayaagh, H. (2021). Performance Improvements for Reversible Solid Oxide Fuel Cell Systems [PowerPoint slides].
Fuelcellenergy. https://netl.doe.gov/sites/default/files/netl-file/21SOFC_Ghezel-Ayagh17.pdf
20
James, B.D., Prosser, J.H., & Das S. (2022) HTE Stack Manufacturing Cost Analysis [PowerPoint slides]. Strategic Analysis.
https://www.energy.gov/sites/default/files/2022-03/HTE%20Workshop-Strategic%20Analysis.pdf
Figure 12: FuelCell Energy’s Design for a GW-Scale System for Converting Off-Peak Nuclear Power to Hydrogen21
50 MW Electrolysis Unit
148’ - 0”
Figure 13: Scaled-Up Designs of SOEC Hot-Boxes with Balance of Plant Elements for the Heating System:
(A) 1 Hot-Box of 1.5 MW with 16 of 94 kW Stacks and Integrated Heat BoP,
(B) 4 Hot-Boxes of 0.4 MW (i.e. 4 of 94 kW Stacks Per Hotbox) with Integrated Heat BoP, and
(C) 4 Hot-Boxes of 0.4 MW (i.e. 4 of 94 kW Stacks) with Separate Stack-Box and Heat BoP-Box22
A B C
Reactants
Reactants
steam
Reactants
steam
Key
HEX1
Stack
HEX2 Power Reactants
21
(2022) FuelCell Energy Platforms for Hydrogen Production [PowerPoint Slides]. FuelCell Energy.
https://www.energy.gov/sites/default/files/2022-03/Bulk%20Storage%20Workshop_Day1_06.pdf
22
Institute for Sustainable Process Technology. (2023). Next Level Solid Oxide Electrolysis.
https://ispt.eu/media/20230508-FINAL-SOE-public-report-ISPT.pdf
Higher temperature thus leads to higher conductivity, which translates into higher current density at a
given voltage, as seen in Figure 14. Higher current density decreases equipment costs and the physical
footprint of the system as fewer stacks and balance-of-plant components are needed to produce the
same quantity of hydrogen. However, improvements in conductivity must be weighed against practical
considerations such as the durability of the electrolyzer. From a durability standpoint, high-temperature
operation results in more thermal stress, leading to faster degradation and increasing the probability of
component failure.
Solid oxide electrolyzers will usually be designed with a temperature sweet spot that optimizes for stack
lifetime and performance. Different manufacturers will target different sweet spots depending on their
choice of materials and stack design. Some systems will work optimally at 600°C, while others will be
designed to operate at 700°C or even above 800°C. Aside from choice of material, the thickness of the
solid electrolyte will influence the optimal operating temperature: thicker electrolytes are less conductive
and will require higher temperatures to match the conductivity of thinner electrolytes.
Figure 14: Cell Voltage vs. Current Density of a Solid Oxide Cell23
1.8
600ºC
1.6 550ºC
500ºC
1.4
Cell Voltage (V)
1.2
SOFC Mode
1.0
0.8
0.6
0.4
0.2
-2.5 -2.0 -1.5 -1.0 -0.5 -0.0 0.5 1.0
23
Wu, W., Ding, H., Zhang, Y., Ding, Y., Katiyar, P., Majumdar, P. K., He, T., & Ding, D. (2018). 3D self-architectured steam electrode enabled
efficient and durable hydrogen production in a proton-conducting solid oxide electrolysis cell at temperatures lower than 600 °C.
Advanced Science, 5(11). https://doi.org/10.1002/advs.201800360
Technology Advantages
and Challenges
3.1 The Advantages of Operating an low-grade heat, especially steam at 100°C–150°C,
in the condensate system.
Electrolyzer at High Temperature
A solid oxide electrolyzer that is importing steam from an
High-temperature operation enables a step change
industrial source is thus at the very least 14% more efficient
in efficiency because the electrolyzer will be fed with
than any alkaline, PEM, or AEM competitor. In practice, the
water in the form of steam. Thus, an external source of
efficiency gap today is even larger – around 25% – because
heat above 100°C can be used to evaporate the water,
of imperfect operation of PEM, alkaline, or AEM systems.
effectively relieving the electrolyzer stack from having
However, continuous improvements in alkaline and PEM
to provide the latent heat of evaporation. In terms of the
technologies will likely reduce losses from imperfect
electricity required to produce hydrogen, this results
operation by 2030s, leaving solid oxide with only the
in an efficiency gain of 0.5 kilowatt-hours per normal
efficiency advantage of importing steam.
cubic meter (kWh/Nm3) of hydrogen, or 6 kWh per
kilogram (kg) of hydrogen.24 The ability to make use SOEC operation coupled with steam imports has
of imported steam is particularly relevant to industrial already been demonstrated at a sub-megawatt scale by
processes, which typically discard large amounts of FuelCell Energy,25 as well as by Bloom Energy,26 with the
24
Note how this is equal to the difference between the higher heating value of hydrogen (39.4 kWh/kg) and the lower heating value of
hydrogen (33.3 kWh/kg).
25
Venkataraman, V. (2021). High Temperature Solid Oxide Electrolyzer [PowerPoint Slides]. Bloom Energy.
https://www.energy.gov/sites/default/files/2021-09/h2-shot-summit-panel1-hte-industrial-panel_0.pdf
26
Idaho National Lab and Bloom Energy Produce Hydrogen at Record-Setting Efficiencies. (2022, August 9). Bloom Energy. Retrieved from
https://www.bloomenergy.com/news/idaho-national-lab-and-bloom-energy-produce-hydrogen-at-record-setting-efficiencies/.
27
Simulated in this case means that the input steam was heated to a temperature comparable to the output of a nuclear reactor using an
external heat source.
28
Ivanova, M. E., et al. (2023). Technological Pathways to produce compressed and highly pure hydrogen from solar power.
Angewandte Chemie International Edition, 62(32). https://doi.org/10.1002/anie.202218850
29
What is the overall efficiency of Enapter’s electrolyser? Enapter. (2023, January 9).
https://www.enapter.com/newsroom/kb_post/what-is-the-overall-efficiency-of-enapters-electrolyser
30
Institute for Sustainable Process Technology. (2023). Next Level Solid Oxide Electrolysis.
https://ispt.eu/media/20230508-FINAL-SOE-public-report-ISPT.pdf
Figure 15: Energy Demand in Water Electrolysis as a Function of Temperature, Excluding Balance of Plant31
4.5
1.8
Current SOEC efficiency gain due to better 4.0
1.6
kinetics and conductivity Total energy
3.5 Evaporation
demand
1.4
Exclusive SOEC efficiency gain if importing steam Heat
3.0
1.2
Heat demand
2.5 1.0
2.0 0.8
Figure 16: FuelCell Energy’s Flow Diagram of an SOEC Electrolyzer Coupled with a Nuclear Power Plant32
4 kWh per kg
Nuclear Electrical Power hydrogen
Oxygen
Hydrogen
31
All About SOEC For PtX – TOPSOE
32
Leo, T. (2023, January 12). Low-cost hydrogen production from nuclear energy. FuellCell Energy.
https://www.fuelcellenergy.com/blog/low-cost-hydrogen-production-from-nuclear-energy
3.2 Technology Challenges for As already noted, interconnects and seals are also
susceptible to thermal stress. For instance, metallic
High Temperature Electrolysis interconnects and piping can require special coatings,
One of the biggest hurdles to commercializing solid oxide sometimes involving cobalt, to decrease the risk
technology is shaking its reputation for poor durability. of chromium evaporation which could poison the
A literature review that includes data up to 2020 put the electrode. The need to prevent seals from failing has
average degradation rate for SOEC systems at under also been a major obstacle to SOEC commercialization.
1% per 1,000 hours of operation. Taking performance at The problem is that seals and solid oxide cells have
80% of nameplate capacity as the industry cut-off for different thermal coefficients, which can cause
stack replacement, a 1% degradation rate would imply a mechanical failures as a temperature gradient develops
stack lifetime of around 2.5 years at full load, which, while across the stack. Temperature gradients can be
up from less than half a year a decade ago, is still four to prevented by heating the very stack slowly, or by simply
eight times shorter than the typical expected lifetimes for maintaining it at a constant temperature. Thus, solid
PEM and alkaline technologies. oxide systems will typically require several hours for
a cold start, so that all system elements heat evenly to
However, extrapolating electrolyzer lifetime purely from the requisite temperature. The problem of temperature
observed degradation rates can be misleading. Solid gradients also explains why solid oxide systems degrade
oxide stacks can compensate for loss of performance more during frequent cycling. This can make it much
by operating at a higher temperature and thereby preferable to keep the stack in a hot ‘standby’ mode.
increasing their conductivity. The increased energy Compared with PEM or alkaline systems, solid oxide
demand required to supply the extra heat will not exceed systems require a lower minimal load (3% for SOEC vs.
an extra kWh per kg H2 produced. Higher temperatures more than 10% for PEM/ALK/AEM) to be on standby.
increase viable running hours beyond what degradation
rates would suggest without sacrificing meaningful
performance. Most solid oxide manufacturers build this
functionality within their stacks.
33
Institute for Sustainable Process Technology. (2023). Next Level Solid Oxide Electrolysis.
https://ispt.eu/media/20230508-FINAL-SOE-public-report-ISPT.pdf
A B C
20 8
test time 8
Salzgitter (Germany)
Leuna (Germany)
Rotterdam (Netherlands)
Salzgitter (Germany)
Foulum (Denmark)
5 2 2
0 0 0
09 11 13 15 17 19 09 11 13 15 17 19 2015 2017 2020 2021 2023
Year
34
Hauch, A., Küngas, R., Blennow, P., Hansen, A. B., Hansen, J. B., Mathiesen, B. V., & Mogensen, M. B. (2020a). Recent advances in solid
oxide cell technology for electrolysis. Science, 370(6513). https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aba6118
35
Hydrogen from Next-generation Electrolyzers of Water (H2NEW). H2NEW. (n.d.). https://h2new.energy.gov/home
36
Zhang, M., Wang, E., Mao, J., Wang, H., Ouyang, M., & Hu, H. (2022). Performance analysis of a metal-supported intermediate-temperature
solid oxide electrolysis cell. Frontiers in Energy Research, 10. https://doi.org/10.3389/fenrg.2022.888787
18%
Pipeline
Underground Storage
Buses/ trucks
Passenger vehicles
Tanks
Compression losses as a fraction of hydrogen LHV (%)
16%
14%
12%
10%
8%
Max
6%
Min
4%
2%
0%
Pressure (bar)
37
Institute for Sustainable Process Technology. (2023). Next Level Solid Oxide Electrolysis.
https://ispt.eu/media/20230508-FINAL-SOE-public-report-ISPT.pdf
However, the mechanisms behind H-SOEC are still poorly understood: many studies note significant
current leakage, and the electrical efficiencies of H-SOEC designs are still far below those of O-SOECs.38
New materials and manufacturing approaches. Some SOEC start-ups have chosen to completely reinvent
the process for manufacturing the solid oxide stack. With the help of new materials and dry power pressing
additive methods, they claim to be able to produce a monolithic, seal-free design with internal gas routing
channels. This innovation allows for a marked increase in the operating pressure range and consequently
the power density of the cell, while also removing potential failure mechanisms associated with seals
and interconnects.
Novel ionically conductive materials. An up-and-coming company called Advanced Ionics claims to
have created a hybrid design which conducts oxygen ions between electrodes but does not feature a
brittle ceramic membrane. This innovation allows the electrolyzer to operate at a lower temperature
range (200°C–600°C) than with a conventional solid oxide. Lower operating temperature translates
into less thermal stress, all the while improving the efficiency of integration with an external source of
low-temperature process heat. This is important because most industrial facilities operate at temperatures
well below the range needed for conventional SOEC operation (Figure 20).
Figure 20: Operating Temperature Ranges of Electrolyzers and the Typical Process Temperature
of Various Industrial and Power Generation Processes39
Steel
Desulfurization Cracking
Nuclear
Methanol
Fischer Tropsch
38
Lei, L., Zhang, J., Yuan, Z., Liu, J., Ni, M., & Chen, F. (2019). Progress report on Proton conducting solid oxide electrolysis cells.
Advanced Functional Materials, 29(37). https://doi.org/10.1002/adfm.201903805
39
Source: Advanced Ionics pitch deck.
Advantages
■ Mature technology with GWs ■ High-power densities ■ No expensive or ■ Lowest standby load
of historical deployment exceeding 2A/cm2, enabling critical minerals
■ Intrinsic high efficiency due
compact designs and small
■ Multi-MW stacks enable ■ Compact designs and to fast kinetics and high
physical footprint
systems with large capacities small footprint like PEM conductivity at elevated
already today ■ Fast cold start-up temperatures
■ Suitable for high pressure
time and fast load
■ Potential to use (>30 barg) operation ■ Option to leverage external
changing capabilities
earth abundant and sources of heat to attain
■ Potential to use
inexpensive materials ■ Relatively mature, with MWs stack electrical efficiencies
earth abundant and
over 100%
■ High intrinsic product inexpensive materials
gas purity ■ Some designs can operate
reversibly as fuel cells
■ Can exceed its rated power
and electrolyzers
for brief periods giving a
broader range of flexibility ■ Can electrolyse
carbon-based molecules
and co-electrolyse them
with water
■ Potential to use
earth abundant and
inexpensive materials
Disadvantages
■ High material effort on ■ Use of expensive materials ■ Available stack sizes are ■ Highest physical footprint,
system level by using highly as titanium and critical in the low kWs, driving up 1/3rd more than alkaline and
alkaline liquid as electrolyte platinum group metals balance of plant costs. AEM and 3.5x more than
(PGM) on cell level PEM
■ Low power densities and ■ Shorter stack lifetimes than
large footprint ■ Long-term stability needs to for alkaline and PEM due to ■ High operating
be proven at MW scale membrane degradation temperatures cause
■ Additional effort for gas
thermally accelerated aging
purity required ■ Current generation reliant
on ‘forever chemicals’ such ■ Produced hydrogen needs
■ Slow cold start-up time
as PFAS which don’t occur in to be separated from steam
■ High minimal load due to nature, and hardly degrade and purified
gas permeability of the in the natural environment
■ Low output pressure
membrane
requiring external
compression
■ Cold starts take several
hours
■ Historical reputation for
poor durability
Development stage >1 GW deployed >100 MW deployed <10 MW deployed >1 GW deployed
(fuel cell)
<10 MW deployed
(electrolyser)
Electrolyte Liquid: 25 – 40% KOH Solid: proton exchange Liquid-solid hybrid: Solid: ceramic –
membrane (Nafion) 1% KOH/anion zirconia or ceria based
exchange membrane
Typical current densities 0.4 – 1.0 0.2 – 4.0 0.2 – 2.0 0.5 – 1.5
today (A/cm2)
Stack cost (2020 $/kW) 270 – 450 400 – 870 200 250 – 2,000
Electrolyzer system cost 800 – 1,500 1,400 – 2,100 3,333 917 – 4,000
with BoP (2020 $/kW)
Stack lifetime 60,000 – 100,000 50,000 – 90,000 5,000 – 40,000 20,000 – 50,000
(full load hours)
40
Zheng, Y., Chen, Z. & Zhang, J. (2021). Solid Oxide Electrolysis of H2O and CO2 to Produce Hydrogen and Low-Carbon Fuels.
Electrochem. Energ. Rev. 4, 508–517. https://doi.org/10.1007/s41918-021-00097-4 ; Wang, J. (2020, October 20). AEM water electrolysis:
How it works. Enapter. https://www.enapter.com/newsroom/aem-water-electrolysis-how-it-works ; European Commission, Joint
Research Centre, Davies, J., Dolci, F., Weidner, E. (2021). Historical analysis of FCH 2 JU electrolyser projects : evaluation of contributions
towards advancing the state of the art, Publications Office. https://data.europa.eu/doi/10.2760/951902 ; Pem Electrolyser. Nel Hydrogen.
(2022, December 16). https://nelhydrogen.com/product/m-series-3/ ; The Oxford Institute for Energy Studies. (2022). Cost-competitive
green hydrogen: how to lower the cost of electrolysers?. https://www.oxfordenergy.org/wpcms/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/Cost-
competitive-green-hydrogen-how-to-lower-the-cost-of-electrolysers-EL47.pdf ; Department of Energy. (2016). Hydrogen Production Cost
from Solid Oxide Electrolysis. https://www.hydrogen.energy.gov/docs/hydrogenprogramlibraries/pdfs/16014_h2_production_cost_solid_
oxide_electrolysis.pdf ; Wang, L., Chen, M., Küngas, R., Lin, T.-E., Diethelm, S., Maréchal, F., & Van herle, J. (2019). Power-to-fuels
via solid-oxide electrolyzer: Operating window and Techno-Economics. Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews, 110, 174–187. https://
doi.org/10.1016/j.rser.2019.04.071 ; Institute for Sustainable Process Technology. (2023). Next Level Solid Oxide Electrolysis. https://ispt.
eu/media/20230508-FINAL-SOE-public-report-ISPT.pdf ; Fraunhofer ISE. (2021). Cost Forecast for Low-Temperature Electrolysis. https://
www.ise.fraunhofer.de/content/dam/ise/de/documents/presseinformationen/2022/2021-11-17_CATF_Report_Electrolysis_final.pdf ;
Sunfire. (n.d.). Renewable Hydrogen for Industrial Applications Sunfire-Hylink SOEC. Dresden, Germany; Sunfire GmbH. Retrieved from
https://www.sunfire.de/files/sunfire/images/content/Sunfire.de%20(neu)/Sunfire-Factsheet-HyLink-SOEC-20210303.pdf.
41
For a description of how different U.S. government agencies assign TRLs, see: https://www.gao.gov/assets/gao-20-48g.pdf.
42
Ravn, S. (2019, May 29). Delille Oxygen Co. leases two ECOSTM Units for cost-competitive onsite co production. Topsoe.
https://www.topsoe.com/blog/delille-oxygen-co.-leases-two-ecos-units-for-cost-competitive-onsite-co-production
43
Wix Christian (2022) Solid Oxide Electrolysis Explained [PowerPoint Slides]. TOPSOE.
https://fortesmedia.com/files/files/Doc_Pack/Hydrogen_%26_P2X/Christian_Wix_Topsoe.pdf
44
Junghans, U., & Rasch, C. (2023, August 8). E-CO2Met – Electricity & CO2 to methanol. Fraunhofer Center for Chemical-Biotechnological
Processes CBP. https://www.igb.fraunhofer.de/content/cbp/en/reference-projects/e-co2met.html
45
European Commission. (2021). Multimegawatt high-temperature electrolyser to generate green hydrogen for production of high-quality
biofuels. https://doi.org/10.3030/875123
46
European Commission. (2016). Green Industrial Hydrogen via Reversible High-Temperature Electrolysis. https://doi.org/10.3030/700300
47
Grinhy2.0. SALCOS®. (n.d.). https://salcos.salzgitter-ag.com/en/grinhy-20.html
Sunfire has demonstrated a 150-kW co-electrolyzer for applications. The project, called C2 Fuels is deploying a
methanol production through its SynLink project, putting small solid oxide system, with electrical capacity in the
the technology at TLR 6.48 In parallel, Sunfire has also single-digit kWs, in Dunkirk, France.49
validated a 10-kW module to produce synthetic fuels
through its Kopernikus PtX project. The next challenge for co-electrolysis technology is
demonstration on a MW scale. To that end, the European
Another solid oxide cell manufacturer, Estonia-based Union is co-funding an ongoing project, called MegaSyn,
Elcogen, has partnered with French energy company to demonstrate syngas production by co-electrolysis
Engie SA on a pilot project to produce dimethyl ether in an industrial environment. The aim is to lift the solid
(DME), a synthetic alternative to diesel fuel for transport oxide co-electrolysis technology to TRL 7 by 2025.50
48
SynLink – Synthetic E-fuels as key enabler for sector linking. Fraunhofer Center for Chemical-Biotechnological Processes CBP.
(2023, August 9). https://www.cbp.fraunhofer.de/en/reference-projects/synlink.html
49
Elcogen takes a new step for c2fuel! | C2FUEL. (n.d.). https://c2fuel-project.eu/elcogen-takes-a-new-step-for-c2fuel/ ; Lehtinen, T., &
Noponen, M. (2021). Solid oxide electrolyser demonstrator development at Elcogen. ECS Meeting Abstracts, MA2021-03(1), 285–285.
https://doi.org/10.1149/ma2021-031285mtgabs
50
Hansen, K. V. (n.d.). MEGASYN – Power-to-X Project in MEGAWATT-SCALE. https://www.megasyn.eu.
https://www.megasyn.eu/highlights/megasyn-start
are abundant, the resulting clean hydrogen could then Size 200 k W Round Trip
be stored and turned back to electricity using the same >1 MW Efficiency
device at times when clean power supply is low. This 70% AC-AC
High Volume
approach would benefit from lower capital expenditures Projects to
<200 $/kW ~400
and reduced space requirements because it avoids stack
Stack Cost Number of Cycles
the need to purchase and install electrolyzers and fuel 200 $/kW >1,500
cells separately.
51
Ghezel-Ayagh, Hossein. Reversible Solid Oxide Fuel Cell Systems for Energy Storage and Hydrogen Production. United States.
https://doi.org/10.2172/1874500
52
European Commission. (2023). Reversible solid oxide Electrolyzer and Fuel cell for optimized Local Energy miX.
https://doi.org/10.3030/779577
53
Di Molfetta, R. (2022, April 5). Strategies for regional deployment of hydrogen infrastructure: The case of North Rhine-Westphalia,
Germany. http://kth.diva-portal.org/smash/get/diva2:1652006/FULLTEXT01.pdf
54
Wulf, C., Linßen, J., & Zapp, P. (2018). Review of Power-to-Gas Projects in Europe. Energy Procedia, 155, 367-378.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.egypro.2018.11.041
55
European Commission. (2019). Green industrial hydrogen production powering Europe along the road to a decarbonised future.
https://doi.org/10.3030/700300
Researchers at Idaho National Lab (INL) in the United 1. Steam harnessing potential is limited to low-pressure
States have been conducting a variety of tests on Bloom tap-off, significantly limiting the size of the electrolyser to
Energy’s solid oxide electrolyzer at the Dynamic Energy double digit MWs
Testing and Integration Laboratory. These tests include 2. This site had an onsite alkaline electrolyser as part of the
physical steam and load simulations that replicate original design and license
nuclear power station conditions, an important step 3. The electrolyser had to be sited at least several hundred
in validating full compatibility with a nuclear facility. meters from the reactor for safety reasons, limiting the
Early tests at high temperatures and high nuclear plant quality of heat that can be transferred to the SOEC to
availability revealed that Bloom Energy’s electrolyzer about 200C.
could produce hydrogen at 37.7 kWh per kilogram of
hydrogen and with 88.5% electrical efficiency (with Thus, it is unlikely that SOEC will be deployed in 100s
respect to LHV of hydrogen and conversion to direct of MW scale at existing nuclear plants. If we are to see
current (DC)).56 FuelCell Energy has also deployed a any big rollout of SOEC at greenfield nuclear plants, it’s
250- kW electrolysis module at INL (Figure 27). imperative that these plants are designed, engineered,
and licensed with solid oxide electrolyser optionality
from the get-go.
56
Idaho National Lab and Bloom Energy Produce Hydrogen at Record-Setting Efficiencies. (2022, August 9). Retrieved from
https://investor.bloomenergy.com/press-releases/press-release-details/2022/Idaho-National-Lab-and-Bloom-Energy-Produce-Hydrogen-at-
Record-Setting-Efficiencies/default.aspx.
SOE cells SOF stacks with 30-60 Stacks and highT balance of stacks
100 → 400 → 800 cm2 → 120 - 150 cells insulated and forming a Hot-box
Current density Amount and stack ratings: → 15-60 stacks
→ 0.6 → 085 → 1.5 A⁄cm2 of few kW→ several stacks with sub-100 kW
57
Institute for Sustainable Process Technology. (2023). Next Level Solid Oxide Electrolysis.
https://ispt.eu/media/20230508-FINAL-SOE-public-report-ISPT.pdf
Total in 2023
32.8 GW
Alkaline
19.7 GW
58
A breakneck growth pivot nears for green hydrogen (2022) BloombergNEF. Available at: https://about.bnef.com/blog/a-breakneck-growth-
pivot-nears-for-green-hydrogen/ (Accessed: 02 November 2023); Clean Air Task Force
Ceres is a UK based solid Ceres is a technology ■ Gadolinium-doped ceria ■ Ceres had signed an
oxide technology developer. developer and licenses out (GDC) electrolyte allows agreement with Shell to
The company traces its roots its tech for other companies lower temperature operation deliver a 1 MW solid oxide
to research at Imperial College to manufacture. (500°C– 600°C) which electrolyzer demonstrator in
London and has been spun out improves durability and 2023 in Bangalore, India.
in 2001. allows the use of standard
■ Another 1 MW demonstrator
automotive gaskets and
is scheduled for
stainless steel, as the
deployment and testing
temperature is below
by 2024 with Bosch and
the evaporation point of
Linde Engineering.
chromium, a strong poison
to SOEC.
■ The trade-off with using
GDC is lower current density
at a given temperature.
■ Metal supported
manufacturing.
59
Note: solid oxide manufacturing lines for fuel cells and electrolyzers are interchangeable, but electrolytic capacity is roughly twice that of
fuel cell capacity adjusted for efficiency.
60
Xcel Energy and Bloom Energy to Produce Zero-Carbon Hydrogen at Nuclear Facility. (2022, September 19). Retrieved from
https://www.bloomenergy.com/news/xcel-energy-and-bloom-energy-to-produce-zero-carbon-hydrogen-at-nuclear-facility/.
61
Patel, S. (2023, April 27). South Korean companies snap up opportunities to advance floating nuclear, nuclear hydrogen, smrs. POWER Magazine.
https://www.powermag.com/south-korean-companies-snap-up-opportunities-to-advance-floating-nuclear-nuclear-hydrogen-smrs/
Originally founded in 1969 Today: 10 to 100 MW ■ Stacks are 95% recyclable. ■ FuelCell Energy has an
Connecticut and called Energy agreement with Malaysia and
GW scale by 2030 ■ Current R&D efforts to
Research Corporation. In 1992 Marine Heavy Engineering
increase stack lifetime to
renamed to FuelCell Energy and Holdings (MHB) to
five years, and beyond.
demonstrated first product – the collaborate on development
molten carbonate fuel cell. As of ■ Opted for disc shape to of large-scale electrolyzers
2011, FuelCell Energy is also in reduce manufacturing in Asia, Australia, and
the business of developing solid costs by repurposing DVD New Zealand.
oxide technology. production machinery.
■ FCE is also partnering
■ Have recently announced with Idaho National Lab to
they are taking commercial explore coupling of SOEC
orders for electrolyzers. with nuclear energy to
leverage process heat for
■ Also working on a reversible
steam imports, and to extend
solid oxide stack product.
the life of nuclear plants.
The 250-kW module is meant
to enter operation in 2023.
Topsoe is a Danish company 500 MW by 2025 with ■ Anode supported ■ First Ammonia signed
founded in 1940 which optionality to expand to 5 GW manufacturing. a capacity reservation
specialises in catalysis and agreement with Topsoe for
■ Operates at 750°C.
process technology in chemical 500MW with the option
and hydro processing. ■ Current 2nd Generation to increase to 5GW to
lifetime of 4 years. produce green ammonia
Topsoe has been active in as fuel for transportation,
solid oxide development since ■ 3rd Generation coming in
power storage & generation,
2004. From 2014 the company second half of this decade
and fertilizer.63
has focussed on developing will feature improvements
electrolysis systems for the to lifetime, cost, and a
production of hydrogen, new geometry.
synthesis gas, and pure carbon ■ Focused on coupling their
monoxide. Topsoe has 80+ years electrolyzer product to
of experience in catalysis ammonia and methanol
utilized in SOEC development. production, where they
have complementary
expertise through their
catalyst business.
62
Sunfire. (2022, February 28). GREEN KEROSINE FROM 2024: NORSK E-FUEL PRESENTS ITS PLANS. Retrieved from
https://www.sunfire.de/en/news/detail/green-kerosine-from-2024-norsk-e-fuel-presents-its-plans.
63
TOPSOE and first ammonia to launch green ammonia production. F&L Asia. (2022, September 16). https://www.fuelsandlubes.com/
flo-article/topsoe-and-first-ammonia-to-launch-green-ammonia-production/#:~:text=Topsoe%20and%20First%20Ammonia%20
have,storage%20and%20generation%2C%20and%20fertilizer
Before discussing details, it is important to note that Once the substrate has been selected, the layers of the
solid oxide manufacturing will look largely the same electrolyzer ‘sandwich’ can be assembled. This layering
whether the end product is electrolytic cells or fuel cells. of cell elements can be done in several ways, but the
In fact, the manufacturing process, and the machinery it three most common industrial methods are tape casting,
requires, will be shared and switched between the two screen printing, and vapor deposition.
products depending on the order book. Switching over
Vapor deposition is the slowest of these three options
from fuel cell production to electrolytic cell production
because it is often done manually. This method is widely
and vice versa will take less than several hours.
used in early-stage factories and labs because it does not
cause mechanical stress and the capital requirements
First Step: the Substrate are relatively light. In contrast, screen printing and
tape casting are more capital intensive but allow for far
Solid oxide cell manufacturing starts with a substrate,
greater throughput and automation. Still, because screen
on which other cell elements will be deposited in
printing is a batch process, it is typically slower than tape
layers. The substrate can be thought of as the bread
casting, which is a continuous process.
to a sandwich. The choice of substrate will vary by
electrolyzer design and manufacturing method, but Nonetheless, most solid oxide manufacturers currently
the substrate is an integral element of the cell, like the prefer screen printing as it is easier to control and
electrolyte, the electrode, or the interconnect. Older perfect than tape casting. This leads to more consistent
solid oxide designs rely on electrolyte-supported quality which is paramount during high-temperature
manufacturing, while newer designs are electrode- operation when even the slightest imperfections
or even metal-supported. compound. Screen printing is also cheaper and easier
to set up at smaller manufacturing scales (megawatts to
The choice of substrate has implications for the
single-digit gigawatts).
operational characteristics of the cell, and for the
cost of stack manufacturing. Electrolyte-supported Factories might employ a mix of these methods at
manufacturing arose because of the difficulty of different stages of manufacturing. For instance, a factory
depositing thin layers of yttria-stabilized zirconium (YSZ) might tape cast the solid oxide electrolyte substrate,
electrolyte, which typically needs to be laid in thicker and then apply electrodes using screen printing. The
layers (>10 micrometers or μm) to prevent cracking. optimization problem in this respect has different
Newer ceria-based electrolytes can be deposited in solutions depending on the manufacturer’s experience,
thinner layers, which opens the possibility of electrode- throughput, choice of materials, and choice of substrate.
or metal-supported manufacturing.
Figure 31 and Figure 32 show how the process might
Thinner electrolytes mean better conductivity at change between electrolyte- and electrode-supported
lower temperatures, but they also have manufacturing manufacturing.
advantages such as lower material costs and lower heat
input requirements for sintering. Heat treatment steps
are usually the costliest element of the manufacturing
process for SOEC cells and will account for approximately
40% of the stack’s manufacturing cost.64
64
James, B.D., Prosser, J.H., & Das S. (2022) HTE Stack Manufacturing Cost Analysis [PowerPoint slides]. Strategic Analysis.
https://www.energy.gov/sites/default/files/2022-03/HTE%20Workshop-Strategic%20Analysis.pdf
Electrolyte Supprted Anode Supprted Cathode Supprted Substrate Supprted Metal Supprted
(ES) (AS) (CS) (SS) (MS)
Figure 31: Process Flow Diagram of a ‘Generic’ SOEC Stack Fabrication Using Electrolyte Supported Cells66
Ball Mill Ball Mill Hydrogen Ball Mill Barrier Ball Mill Air INTERONNECT ETCHING
Electrolyte Slurry Electrolyte Slurry Layer Slurry Electrode Slurry
Shear Interconnect Metal
CELL FABRICATION
Apply Photoresist
Tape Cast Electrolyte Screen Print Hydrogen Screen Print Air Electrode
& Illuminate
(in-line drying) Electrode (in-line drying) (in-line drying)
Dry Glass Seals Glass Seal Bead Glass Seal Ball Mill Hydrogen Electrode Ball Mill Air Electrode
(batch) Dispensing Slurry Contact Paste Slurry Contact Paste Slurry
Place Cell
Screen Print A.E. Paste Screen Print H.E. Paste Machine End Plates
65
Kuterbekov, K. A., Nikonov, A. V., Bekmyrza, K. Zh., Pavzderin, N. B., Kabyshev, A. M., Kubenova, M. M., Kabdrakhimova, G. D., et al. (2022).
Classification of Solid Oxide Fuel Cells. Nanomaterials, 12(7), 1059. MDPI AG. Retrieved from http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nano12071059
66
James, B.D., Prosser, J.H., & Das S. (2022) HTE Stack Manufacturing Cost Analysis [PowerPoint slides]. Strategic Analysis.
https://www.energy.gov/sites/default/files/2022-03/HTE%20Workshop-Strategic%20Analysis.pdf
Ball Mill Ball Mill Ball Mill Ball Mill Ball Mill INTERONNECT
Hydrogen Electrode Hydrogen Electrode Electrolyte Barrier Layer Air Electrode ETCHING
Support Slurry Functional Slurry Slurry Slurry Slurry
Shear Interconnect
CELL FABRICATION Metal
Dissolve in
Sinter Hydrogen Etching Solution
Tape Cast Hydrogen Fire Air
Electrode Layers
Electrode Support Electrode
& Electrode
Layer 2 (in-line drying) Photo-
Electrochemical
Etching
Screen Print
Tape Cast Hydrogen Barrier Layer Laser Cut
Electrode Functional (in-line drying) Cells
Layer (in-line drying) Alkaline
Wash
Fire Barrier
Layer Laser Cut
Interconnects
Dry Glass Glass Glass Ball Mill Hydrogen Ball Mill Air
Seals Seal Bead Seal Electrode Contact Electrode Contact
(batch) Dispensing Slurry Paste Slurry Paste Slurry
Place
Cell
Machine
Screen Print Screen Print
End
A.E. Paste H.E. Paste
Plates
Place
After n repeats
Interconnect
3000 m2 facility with pilot cell / stack production, R&D and extensive 33 test stand capability (Calgary, AB)
Once the electrode or electrolyte layers are printed, Manufacturers will probably deviate slightly from flow
they are sintered in ovens to make a solid oxide cell sheets by, for instance, outsourcing some steps such as
‘sandwich.’ Cells are then joined to make a stack, which interconnect etching. Flow sheets also don’t list all the
involves first coating the cells with a sealing material quality control steps that are taken at factories. These
to prevent gas leakage and then encasing them with a quality controls are critical to ensure that the stack will
current-conducting interconnect to join the cells. not fail before its intended lifetime. Most of these steps
The stack is then pressed together, dried, fitted with in the manufacturing process can be automated, using
any extra hardware like piping, if needed, and subjected analytical methods involving lasers and x-rays
to a final quality control process. and robotics (Figure 33).
67
Ghezel-Ayaagh, H. (2021). Protonic Ceramics for Energy Storage and Electricity Generation Using Ammonia [PowerPoint slides].
Fuelcellenergy. https://www.energy.gov/sites/default/files/2021-08/12-proton-ceramics-using-ammonia.pdf
$250 $250
$115/kW $78/kW
$200 $200
$150 $150
$100 $100
$50 $50
$0 $0
25
50
75
0
0
0
0
0
1,0 5
00
1,3 0
00
1,6 0
00
2, 0
0
25
50
75
0
0
0
0
0
1,0 5
00
1,3 0
00
1,6 0
00
2, 0
0
82
82
10
20
35
50
65
0
00
10
20
35
50
65
0
00
1,1
1,4
1,1
1,4
1,8
1,8
68
https://www.energy.gov/sites/default/files/2022-03/HTE%20Workshop-Strategic%20Analysis.pdf
69
James, B.D., Prosser, J.H., & Das S. (2022) HTE Stack Manufacturing Cost Analysis [PowerPoint slides]. Strategic Analysis.
https://www.energy.gov/sites/default/files/2022-03/HTE%20Workshop-Strategic%20Analysis.pdf
70
James, B.D., Prosser, J.H., & Das S. (2022) HTE Stack Manufacturing Cost Analysis [PowerPoint slides]. Strategic Analysis.
https://www.energy.gov/sites/default/files/2022-03/HTE%20Workshop-Strategic%20Analysis.pdf
71
FuelCell Energy. (2022). Reversible Solid Oxide Fuel Cell Systems for Energy Storage and Hydrogen Production.
https://www.osti.gov/servlets/purl/1874500
2022 – Cost of SOEC BoP (2022 $/kW) 2030 – Cost of SOEC BoP (2022 $/kW)
Source DTU67 Strategic Analysis68 FuelCell Energy69 DTU67 Strategic Analysis68 FuelCell Energy69
Heat Exchanger 66 – – 16 – –
Compressor 122 – – 30 – –
Other BoP 44 – – 11 – –
Table 8: Estimates of Electrolyzer System Direct Costs Table 9: O&M Cost Estimates for an SOEC System
Direct System Cost – Electrolyzer Plus Installation ($/kW) O&M Annual Cost Excl. Stack Replacement ($/kW/yr)
2030 15 17 17 39.5
72
Based on plant size of 0.1 MW.
73
Based on a manufacturing capacity of 20 MW/year.
74
Based on plant size of 10 MW.
75
Based on a manufacturing capacity of 500 MW/year.
76
Bloom Energy. (2022). The Role of Solid Oxide Technology in the Hydrogen Economy: A Primer.
https://f.hubspotusercontent30.net/hubfs/5242085/BE21_22%20Hydrogen-white-paper_D.pdf
77
Institute for Sustainable Process Technology. (2023). Next Level Solid Oxide Electrolysis.
https://ispt.eu/media/20230508-FINAL-SOE-public-report-ISPT.pdf
78
Bloom Energy. (2022). The Role of Solid Oxide Technology in the Hydrogen Economy: A Primer.
https://f.hubspotusercontent30.net/hubfs/5242085/BE21_22%20Hydrogen-white-paper_D.pdf
79
Idaho National Lab. 2019. Evaluation of Hydrogen Production Feasibility for a Light Water Reactor in the Midwest.
https://inldigitallibrary.inl.gov/sites/sti/sti/Sort_18785.pdf
Figure 35: Estimated Levelized Demand for the Main Minerals in Electrolyzers and Fuel Cells Today81
10
1
kg per GWh output
0.1
0.01
0.001
0.0001
Nickel Zirconium Nickel Zirconium Lanthanum Yttrium Platinum Palladium Iridium Platinum
Alkaline electrolyser SOEC electrolyser (SOEC fuel cell) PEM electrolyser Fuel cell
80
Lme Nickel | London Metal Exchange. (n.d.). https://www.lme.com/en/metals/non-ferrous/lme-nickel
81
IEA (2022). The Role of Critical Minerals in Clean Energy Transitions Sector. https://iea.blob.core.windows.net/assets/ffd2a83b-8c30-4e9d-
980a-52b6d9a86fdc/TheRoleofCriticalMineralsinCleanEnergyTransitions.pdf
240,000
180,000
120,000
60,000
0
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021
2022
Others United States Russia Burma/Myanmar China Australia
To illustrate why it should be relatively easy to risks, and obsolescence risk. Examples of financial risk
accommodate rare-earth demand from SOEC include the possibility that banks would be unwilling
manufacture, it is instructive to consider the market for to finance an unfamiliar technology or that project
lanthanum. In 2019, around 50,000 tonnes83 of lanthanum developers would prioritize cheaper upfront costs and
oxide, containing 42,500 tonnes of elemental lanthanum, select alkaline and PEM technologies. An example
were mined globally. Producing 1,000 MWh of hydrogen of operational risk is the possibility that an SOEC
using SOECs requires 0.2 kg of lanthanum. Thus, just system might be run outside the manufacturer’s design
one year's global supply of lanthanum would be enough parameters (e.g., with frequent cold starts or without
to produce 212.5 billion MWh of hydrogen (assuming maintaining optimal temperature conditions). This could
50,000 GW of SOEC running at 50% capacity factor). cause equipment failures and entrench the perception
that the technology remains underdeveloped. Other
external developments, meanwhile, can create
5.5 Non-Technological Risks to
obsolescence risk – for example if the electrification
SOEC Scaleup of industrial processes vastly reduces sources of
process heat for SOEC systems to tap into.
To successfully scale SOEC technology, several
additional, non-technological risks will need to be
overcome. These include financial risks, operational
82
King, H. M. (n.d.). REE - Rare Earth Elements and their Uses. Geology. https://geology.com/articles/rare-earth-elements/
83
Davis, S. (2020, July 29). Rare Earth Elements Supply Uncertain for IC Fabs. Semiconductor Digest.
https://www.semiconductor-digest.com/rare-earth-elements-supply-uncertain-for-ic-fabs/