Selections for Funding Opportunity in Support of the Hydrogen Shot and a University Research Consortium on Grid Resilience

On May 22, 2023, the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) announced nearly $42 million in funding for 22 projects to advance critical technologies for producing, storing, and deploying clean hydrogen. DOE also announced $17.8 million to establish a North American university research consortium that will help states and Tribal communities implement grid resilience programs and achieve energy goals. 

Selection for award negotiations is not a commitment by DOE to issue an award or provide funding. Before funding is issued, DOE and the applicants will undergo a negotiation process, and DOE may cancel negotiations and rescind the selection for any reason during that time.  

Selectee NameLocation
(City, State)
Project TitleFederal Share (approx.)
TOPIC 1: Solar Fuels from Photoelectrochemical (PEC) and Solar Thermochemical (STCH) Water Splitting
Arizona State UniversityTempe, AZInverse Design of Perovskite Materials for Solar Thermochemical Hydrogen Production$1 million
California Institute of TechnologyPasadena, CADemonstration of a Robust, Compact Photoelectrochemical Hydrogen Generator$1 million
University of Colorado BoulderBoulder, CONon-Intermittent, Solar-Thermal Processing to Split Water Continuously via a Near-Isothermal, Pressure-Swing Redox Cycle$1 million
University of Colorado BoulderBoulder, COAccelerated Discovery and Development of Perovskites for Solar Thermochemical Hydrogen Production$1 million
Yale UniversityNew Haven, CT>200 cm2 Type-3 PEC Water Splitting Prototype Using Bandgap-Tunable Perovskite Tandem and Molecular-Scale Designer Coatings$1 million
University of Hawaii at ManoaHonolulu, HISemi-Monolithic Devices for Photoelectrochemical Hydrogen Production$1 million
Saint-GobainNorthborough, MAScalable Solar Fuels Production in A Reactor Train System by Thermochemical Redox Cycling of Novel Nonstoichiometric Perovskites$1 million
University of MichiganAnn Arbor, MIGallium Nitride (GaN) Protected Tandem Photoelectrodes for High Efficiency, Low Cost, and Stable Solar Water Splitting$1 million
Washington University in St. LouisSaint Louis, MOCa-Ce-Ti-Mn-O-Based Perovskites for Two-Step Solar Thermochemical Hydrogen Production Cycles$1 million
The University of ToledoToledo, OHAll-Perovskite Tandem Photoelectrodes for Low-Cost Solar Hydrogen Fuel Production from Water Splitting$1 million
Rice UniversityHouston, TXScalable Halide Perovskite Photoelectrochemical Cell Mini Modules with 20% Solar-to-Hydrogen Efficiency and 1,000 hours of Diurnal Durability$940,000
Funding for the HydroGEN Laboratory Consortium to provide technical assistance to TOPIC 1 projects: $8.3 million
TOPIC 1 Total: $19.2 million
TOPIC 2: Development and Validation of Sensor Technology for Monitoring and Measuring Hydrogen Losses
Indrio Technologies Inc.San Jose, CAMultipass Palladium Optical Cavities for ppb-Level Quantification of Hydrogen Concentrations$1.1 million
Palo Alto Research Center IncorporatedPalo Alto, CADetection system Comprising Inexpensive Printed sensor arrays for Hydrogen gas Emission monitoring and Reporting (DECIPHER)$1.5 million
University of GeorgiaAthens, GAThe Electrical Hydrogen Sensor Technology with a Sub-Minute Response Time and a Part-per-Billion Detection Limit for Hydrogen Environmental Monitoring$1.5 million
Iowa State UniversityAmes, IASensing Hydrogen Losses at 1 ppb-Level for Hydrogen-Blending Natural Gas Pipelines$1.5 million
Oakland UniversityRochester, MIReal-Time Ionic Liquid Electrochemical Sensor for Highly Sensitive and Selective Hydrogen Detection$1.5 million
General Electric CompanyNiskayuna, NYHydrogen Loss Quantification Technology Enabled by Networked Dielectric Excitation Gas Sensors$1.5 million
TOPIC 2 Total: $8.6 million
TOPIC 3: Materials-based Hydrogen Storage Demonstrations
GKN Hydrogen Corp.Carlsbad, CAMetal Hydride Hydrogen Storage Supporting Onsite Hydrogen Infrastructure at WGL/Washington Gas$2 million
OCO Inc.Richland, WAFormic Acid-Based Hydrogen Energy Production and Distribution System (Formic-HEPADS)$2.5 million
TOPIC 3 Total: $4.5 million
TOPIC 4: M2FCT- High Performing, Durable, Low-PGM Catalysts and Membrane Electrode Assemblies for Medium- and Heavy-Duty Applications
University of California, IrvineIrvine, CAAdvanced Low-PGM Cathode Catalysts with Self-Healing Properties for High Performing and Highly Durable MEAs$3 million
General Motors LLCPontiac, MIDesign of Catalyst Nanostructures and Interfaces for Enhanced Durability in Low-PGM HD Fuel Cell MEA$3 million
State University of New York at BuffaloAmherst, NYDesigning Highly Durable Ternary PtCoM Intermetallic Catalysts on Advanced Support for Heavy-Duty MEAs$3 million
TOPIC 4 Total: $9 million
TOPIC 5: The University Research Consortium for Grid Resilience (URCGR)
Stanford UniversityStanford, CAAn Equitable, Affordable & Resilient Nationwide Energy System Transition (EARNEST)$17.8 million
TOPIC 5 Total: $17.8 million