The single biggest reason hydrogen fuel cells remain expensive is platinum. The precious metal is the standard catalyst for the reactions that make fuel cells work, and it cannot benefit from economies of scale. The more fuel cells the world builds, the more expensive platinum gets. It is a cost problem that scaling up actually makes worse.
Researchers at Cornell University, the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and Wuhan University have now demonstrated a fuel cell that eliminates platinum entirely. Their design uses a nickel core coated in a 2-nanometer shell of nitrogen-doped carbon as the anode catalyst, paired with a cobalt-manganese cathode. The result is a completely precious-metal-free hydrogen fuel cell that outputs more than 200 milliwatts per square centimeter, surpassing US Department of Energy performance targets.
The work, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, was conducted within the Center for Alkaline-based Energy Solutions (CABES), an Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the US Department of Energy.
The key to the breakthrough is switching from an acidic to an alkaline operating environment. Traditional fuel cells use highly acidic electrolytes because they produce a fast hydrogen oxidation reaction, the core chemical process that generates electricity. The problem is that the only catalysts that survive in high acid are precious metals like platinum and palladium, which are rare, expensive, and supply-constrained.
“An alkaline medium allows you to use nonprecious metals, nickel, iron, cobalt, manganese, which are 500 to 1,000 times less expensive than precious metals like platinum and palladium, so that the cost issue becomes irrelevant,” said Hector D. Abruna, professor of chemistry at Cornell and a lead researcher on the project. “But it means you have to develop catalysts that can operate in alkaline media, have high performance and exhibit long-term durability during operation.”
That durability has been the central obstacle. Nickel has long shown promise as a catalyst in alkaline environments, but on its own it oxidizes rapidly, losing its catalytic activity. The Cornell team used microscopic and spectroscopic techniques to examine nickel catalyst behavior in detail, confirming that a metallic nickel surface is essential for effectively catalyzing the hydrogen oxidation reaction. The nitrogen-doped carbon shell protects the nickel core from oxidation while maintaining the metallic surface needed for the reaction to work.
The quantum mechanical modeling, performed by the Wisconsin-Madison team, explained why the design works at an atomic level. The carbon shell modifies the electronic properties of the nickel surface in a way that optimizes hydrogen binding, the critical factor that determines how efficiently the reaction proceeds.
The research arrives at a moment when hydrogen fuel cells face an identity crisis. The technology is efficient, extracting more than 60% of fuel energy compared to less than 20% for internal combustion engines, and can reach 85% efficiency when waste heat is also captured. Japan and California have commercialized hydrogen fuel cell vehicles. But those vehicles struggle to compete with battery electric vehicles and combustion engines primarily because of cost, and platinum is a major part of that cost equation.
Separate research published in Nature Catalysis earlier this year by engineers at Washington University in St. Louis addressed the same problem from a different angle, stabilizing iron-based catalysts for use in proton exchange membrane fuel cells. That work targeted heavy-duty vehicles like trucks and buses, as well as emerging applications including low-altitude aviation and AI data centers.
Together, the two breakthroughs suggest that the materials bottleneck that has constrained hydrogen fuel cells for decades may finally be loosening. Replacing platinum with nickel, iron, cobalt, or manganese does not just reduce cost. It removes a fundamental supply constraint that would have prevented fuel cells from scaling even if every other engineering challenge were solved. Whether these laboratory results translate into commercial products will depend on manufacturing scale-up and real-world durability testing, but the direction is clear: the future of hydrogen fuel cells, if there is one, will not be built on platinum.


