News Release

INRS researchers among Discover Magazine's 'Top 100 Stories for 2009'

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Institut national de la recherche scientifique - INRS

Much cheaper fuel cell catalysts using iron instead of platinum—this major scientific breakthrough achieved by INRS researchers has earned a spot in Discover Magazine's "Top 100 Stories of 2009," in the January/February 2010 issue. The magazine has been published yesterday. Discover is an American popular science magazine with a readership of over six million.

Researchers Jean-Pol Dodelet, Michel Lefèvre, Eric Proietti, and Frederic Jaouen of INRS's Energy, Materials, and Telecommunications Center in Varennes (Quebec) have taken a major step forward by developing a much improved iron-based catalyst intended for use in fuel cells for various applications including automotive propulsion.

Published in Science in April 2009, INRS's discovery offers a promising alternative to the platinum catalysts currently used in fuel cell prototypes. Platinum, a precious metal mined almost exclusively in South Africa and Russia, is rare and extremely expensive, while iron, Earth's second most abundant metal, presents no cost or supply issues.

Professor Jean-Pol Dodelet's INRS team has shown that this new iron-based catalyst can rival its platinum-based counterpart for the electrochemical reduction of oxygen, one of the two essential reactions needed to generate electrical power. The new catalyst features a vastly improved volumetric current density that is within grasp of the U.S. Department of Energy's elusive 2010 goal.

Researchers at INRS's Energy, Materials, and Telecommunications Center are now focusing their efforts on improving the catalyst's durability to make it commercially viable for use in tomorrow's power demanding applications including transportation.

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INRS is a university dedicated to research and graduate studies. One of Canada's leading research universities in terms of grants per professor, INRS brings together 160 research professors at centers in Montreal, Quebec City, Laval, and Varennes. Conducting the fundamental research essential to the advancement of science in Quebec as well as internationally, INRS research teams also play a critical role in developing concrete solutions to the problems facing our society.


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