GenCell Ltd. is an Israeli company developing hydrogen alkaline based fuel cell systems and solutions that replace diesel generators with clean backup power for utilities, homeland security, healthcare and automated industries, as well as Ammonia (NH3) based off-grid power solutions.[1][2]
History
GenCell Ltd was founded in 2011 by Rami Reshef, Genaddy Finkelshtain and Gil Shavit.[3] The company is headquartered in Petah Tikva.[1] In 2016, GenCell introduced the G5 line of hydrogen gas-powered backup generators to provide power in areas lacking centralized electricity [4]
TDK Corporation and GenCell began collaborating in 2017 to develop and produce an ammonia- based solution. The collaboration involved GenCell's material sciences knowledge and TDK's manufacturing capabilities.
In 2018, GenCell introduced the A5 fuel cell as an alternative to diesel generators.[5] In 2020, GenCell Ltd joined the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange [1]
In 2021, GenCell Ltd began deploying its A5 cell to power an advanced test unit at an emergency communications system station in Iceland.[6]
Technology
The company developed a process to create hydrogen-on-demand from anhydrous ammonia (NH3),[1][7] which enables its fuel cell solutions to also provide primary power for off-grid and poor-grid sites, as well as rural electrification.[8][7]
The company has non-noble metal catalysts patents that enable it to reduce the material costs, and liquid electrolyte (KOH),[7] making the fuel cell solutions for backup and off-grid power to operate in a vast range of weather conditions.[9][8]
Cost
A GenCell A5 4 kW generator costs 60,000-70,000 USD.[13] GenCell estimates that local production of ammonia will help reduce energy production costs, and will allow its generators to run at 70 cents per kWh.[14]
External links
References
- Israeli energy cell firm GenCell joins Tel Aviv Stock Exchange The Jerusalem Post, retrieved 2021-01-25^
- GenCell Energy solution to power advanced test unit in Iceland Hydrogen View, 2021-01-14, retrieved 2021-01-25^
- Ed Reed. Fuel cells vs diesel, GenCell picks a side - News for the Oil and Gas Sector