In the future energy system, the availability of green electricity will fluctuate significantly – at times plentiful, at other times scarce. To balance supply and demand, hydrogen power plants could
TUD Dresden University of Technology, the DRESDEN-concept Science and Innovation Alliance (DDc) and the Free State of Saxony are presenting the 2026 Archimedes Science Award to Professor Peter Wasserscheid, Chair
Researcher Johanna Bantol from Forschungszentrum Jülich has received the Lieselotte Templeton Prize of the Deutschen Gesellschaft für Kristallographie (German Crystallographic Society, DGK). The award was presented to the doctoral researcher
The Multi-SOFC hydrogen demonstration project at Hermann-Josef Hospital in Erkelenz has gained a strong new partner. Reverion GmbH will supply a state-of-the-art fuel cell system for the scheme. The project,
“If you have visions, you should go to the doctor” – this phrase, famously uttered by former Chancellor Helmut Schmidt during the 1980 federal election campaign, was meant to convey
An important milestone in the development of the Institute for Sustainable Hydrogen Economy (IHE) at Forschungszentrum Jülich has been reached; not yet in stone and concrete, but the plans are
What do we need hydrogen for? The non-fossil energy system of the future will require green electrons that flow through power lines and can be stored for short periods in
Hydrogen was long considered the magic word of the energy transition – but is now increasingly viewed with scepticism. For Prof. Peter Jansens, member of the Board of Forschungszentrum Jülich,
Hydrogen is a colourless gas. Yet when people talk about the colours of hydrogen, they mean the way it is produced – and how climate-friendly that process is. One hydrogen
The energy transition presents a major challenge for the chemical industry: until now, chemical plants have been continuously supplied with fossil energy and designed for stable, uniform operation. In the