KAIST Fabricates Green Hydrogen Cells in Just 10 Minutes Like Using a Microwave​
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KAIST Fabricates Green Hydrogen Cells in Just 10 Minutes Like Using a Microwave​


Solid oxide electrolysis cells (SOECs), a key technology for producing green hydrogen without carbon emissions, require a high-temperature “sintering” process to harden ceramic powders. Researchers at KAIST have successfully shortened this process from six hours to just ten minutes, while also reducing the required temperature from 1,400°C to 1,200°C. This innovation dramatically cuts both energy consumption and production time, marking a major step forward for the green hydrogen era.

KAIST (President Kwang Hyung Lee) announced on the 25th of October that a research team led by Professor Kang Taek Lee from the Department of Mechanical Engineering has developed an ultra-fast manufacturing method capable of producing high-performance green hydrogen electrolysis cells in only ten minutes.

The core of this technology lies in sintering—a process in which ceramic powders are baked at high temperatures to form a dense, tightly bonded structure. Proper sintering is critical: it ensures that gases do not leak (as hydrogen and oxygen mixing could cause explosions), oxygen ions move efficiently, and the electrodes adhere firmly to the electrolyte to allow smooth current flow. In short, the precision of the sintering process directly determines the cell’s performance and lifetime.

To address these challenges, the KAIST team applied a “volumetric heating” technique that uses microwaves to heat the material uniformly from the inside out. This approach shortened the sintering process by more than thirtyfold compared to conventional methods. Whereas traditional sintering requires prolonged heating above 1,400°C, the new process uses microwaves to heat the material internally and evenly, achieving stable electrolyte formation at just 1,200°C within 10 minutes.

In conventional fabrication, the essential materials—ceria (CeO₂) and zirconia (ZrO₂)—tend to intermix at excessively high temperatures, degrading material quality. KAIST’s new method allows these two materials to bond firmly at the right temperature without mixing, producing a dense, defect-free bilayer electrolyte.

The total “processing time” includes heating, holding, and cooling. The conventional sintering process required about 36.5 hours, whereas KAIST’s microwave-based technique completes the entire cycle in only 70 minutes—over 30 times faster.
The resulting electrochemical cells demonstrated remarkable performance: they produced 23.7 mL of hydrogen per minute at 750°C, maintained stable operation for over 250 hours, and exhibited excellent durability. Using 3D digital twin simulations, the team further revealed that ultra-fast microwave heating improves electrolyte density and suppresses abnormal grain growth of nickel oxide (NiO) particles within the fuel electrode, thereby enhancing hydrogen production efficiency.

Professor Kang Taek Lee stated, “This research introduces a new manufacturing paradigm that enables the rapid and efficient production of high-performance solid oxide electrolysis cells.” He added, “Compared to conventional processes, our approach drastically reduces both energy consumption and production time, offering strong potential for commercialization.”

This study was co-first-authored by Hyeongmin Yu and Seungsoo Jang, both Ph.D. candidates in Mechanical Engineering at KAIST, with Donghun Lee and Gayoung Youn as collaborators. The research was published online on October 2 in Advanced Materials (Impact Factor: 26.8) and was selected as the Inside Front Cover feature paper for its scientific significance.
※ Paper title: “Ultra-Fast Microwave-Assisted Volumetric Heating Engineered Defect-Free Ceria/Zirconia Bilayer Electrolytes for Solid Oxide Electrochemical Cells”, DOI: 10.1002/adma.202500183)
This work was supported by the Ministry of Science and ICT through the H2 Next Round Program, the Mid-Career Researcher Program, and the Global Research Laboratory (GRL) Program.

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Regions: Asia, South Korea
Keywords: Applied science, Engineering, Technology, Business, Chemicals, Metals, mines & quarries

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