onlyTrustedInfo.comonlyTrustedInfo.comonlyTrustedInfo.com
Notification
Font ResizerAa
  • News
  • Finance
  • Sports
  • Life
  • Entertainment
  • Tech
Reading: Fourier is making hydrogen electrolyzers inspired by data centers
Share
onlyTrustedInfo.comonlyTrustedInfo.com
Font ResizerAa
  • News
  • Finance
  • Sports
  • Life
  • Entertainment
  • Tech
Search
  • News
  • Finance
  • Sports
  • Life
  • Entertainment
  • Tech
  • Advertise
  • Advertise
© 2025 OnlyTrustedInfo.com . All Rights Reserved.
Tech

Fourier is making hydrogen electrolyzers inspired by data centers

Last updated: April 2, 2025 8:00 am
Oliver James
Share
4 Min Read
Fourier is making hydrogen electrolyzers inspired by data centers
SHARE

Despite being the most abundant element in the universe, making cheap, clean hydrogen here on Earth has been a surprisingly tough nut to crack.

“Hydrogen has always been plagued with a couple problems, One is, how do you make it efficiently? Another one is, how do you distribute it efficiently?” Siva Yellamraju, co-founder and CEO of Fourier, told TechCrunch.

Most recent hydrogen startups have been focused on making modular electrolyzers, allowing them to be mass produced and squeezed into shipping containers. Yellamraju’s company has taken that trendy tactic to the extreme. Fourier is targeting something no bigger than two standard server racks standing side-by-side.

Investors have taken note, with General Catalyst and Paramark Ventures leading an $18.5 million Series A round, the company exclusively told TechCrunch. Other participating investors include Airbus Ventures, Borusan Ventures, GSBackers, MCJ Collective, and Positive Ventures.

Fourier’s server analogy extends inside the module, too. There, the company installs multiple small electrolyzers — about 20 in the current design — that it calls blades. Each blade is fed water from a pump shared among them, and electricity comes from lightly modified power supplies borrowed from the data center world.

“We reprogram them, retrofit them to run electrolysis,” Yellamraju said. “It also allows us to use these components that are already sold in the billions.”

Within each hydrogen production module, software manages the blades to optimize their operation. Here, Yellamraju said the company was inspired by another bit of commoditized technology, the lithium-ion battery.

“If you look at companies like Tesla, they started with small cells, an array of them, so that allowed them to do off the shelf components, but push the complexity into a compute layer,” he said.

Tesla’s battery packs string together thousands of smaller batteries, all of which are overseen by a combination of hardware and software that is known as a battery management system. The BMS handles charging and discharging of each individual cell, and it will also watch for anything that suggests a battery is degrading, reducing its use or flagging it for repair.

Fourier’s system similarly monitors the performance of each electrolyzer blade, tweaking output and watching for signs of degradation. The goal, Yellamraju said, is to “push the overall efficiency problem and production problem into a data optimization problem.”

The startup has operated two lab-scale pilots, which make about a kilogram of hydrogen per hour, with a pharmaceutical manufacturer and a solar energy company. Up next are two commercial-scale pilot plants, one at a petrochemical plant in Ohio and another at a company in Fremont, California, that makes airline parts. Both should be operating by June. Ultimately, Fourier is targeting customers that need six to 20 kilograms per hour, which would require around 300 kilowatts to 1 megawatt of electrolyzer capacity.

Fourier’s potential commercial customers, which include pharmaceutical, petrochemical, and ceramics manufacturers, pay around $13 to $14 per kilogram today. Yellamraju said that his company can deliver hydrogen for $6 to $7 per kilogram, not including any government incentives. “With our margin, they’re still saving half the price of hydrogen,” he said.

You Might Also Like

Why Does One Male Lion Hoard All of the Meat For Himself While Others Watch?

OpenAI plans to release a new ‘open’ AI language model in the coming months

Meet the World’s Strangest Fish That Look Too Weird to Be Real

M4 iPad Pro, USB-C Magic Mouse, iPhone 15 Pro, more 9to5Mac

A majority of customers’ personal information stolen in data breach at Allianz Life

Share This Article
Facebook X Copy Link Print
Share
Previous Article Charlotte Edwards: England Women’s head coach says players must be accountable for fitness as she outlines expectations | Cricket News Charlotte Edwards: England Women’s head coach says players must be accountable for fitness as she outlines expectations | Cricket News
Next Article Commonwealth should lead the discussion on slavery reparations | Slavery Commonwealth should lead the discussion on slavery reparations | Slavery

Latest News

Surfer Rides ‘Magical’ Wave with Dolphin Pod After More Than 100 Swim at Him Before Competition: ‘A Good Omen’ (Exclusive)
Surfer Rides ‘Magical’ Wave with Dolphin Pod After More Than 100 Swim at Him Before Competition: ‘A Good Omen’ (Exclusive)
Sports July 30, 2025
Shohei Ohtani exits seventh Dodgers start early with cramps, but remains in game as hitter
Shohei Ohtani exits seventh Dodgers start early with cramps, but remains in game as hitter
Sports July 30, 2025
Vargas and Quero each hit a 3-run homer as the White Sox knock off the Phillies 9-3
Vargas and Quero each hit a 3-run homer as the White Sox knock off the Phillies 9-3
Sports July 30, 2025
Shohei Ohtani leaves mound with trainer after throwing 6 straight balls, including 2 wild pitches
Shohei Ohtani leaves mound with trainer after throwing 6 straight balls, including 2 wild pitches
Sports July 30, 2025
//
  • About Us
  • Contact US
  • Privacy Policy
onlyTrustedInfo.comonlyTrustedInfo.com
© 2025 OnlyTrustedInfo.com . All Rights Reserved.