The Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC) houses a Hikari supercomputer powered by solar photovoltaic panels and now also by electricity generated by the H2@Scale project's fuel cell from its on-site produced clean hydrogen.
Fuel Cell and Inverter
A PowerCell MS-100 polymer electrolyte membrane fuel cell and a Hitachi Energy PS-500 inverter produce up to 100 kW of AC power for TACC using clean hydrogen produced on-site by steam methane reforming (or alternatively by electrolysis).
| Clean H2 to fuel cell through December 2025: | 36 kg |
| Renewable kWh generated through December 2025: | 450 kWh |
Image
Image
Image