Subscribe to the daily news Sign in
En
Germany launches Europe’s first pilot plant for magnetocaloric hydrogen liquefaction
04 September 2025

Germany launches Europe’s first pilot plant for magnetocaloric hydrogen liquefaction

The EU-funded HyLICAL project has inaugurated Europe’s first magnetocaloric pilot plant for hydrogen liquefaction, developed jointly by the Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf (HZDR) and German start-up MAGNOTHERM. The demonstrator marks a key milestone in advancing energy-efficient, climate-friendly hydrogen cooling without conventional compressors or refrigerant gases.

The pilot plant, based at the High Magnetic Field Laboratory Dresden (HLD), uses a 19-tesla superconducting magnet to test the liquefaction of hydrogen via the magnetocaloric effect. The system aims to cool hydrogen to -253°C following pre-cooling with liquid nitrogen, with the goal of significantly reducing liquefaction costs. The partners plan to demonstrate scalability by increasing output to 100 kilograms of liquid hydrogen per day, as part of a long-term vision to eventually reach 5,000 kilograms per day.

MAGNOTHERM and HZDR have collaborated since 2023 under the HyLICAL initiative to integrate academic research with industrial application. A joint lab was established on the Rossendorf campus in 2024 to develop the technology. “Our magnetic cooling technology represents a new type of climate-friendly and energy-efficient alternative, without compressors and environmentally harmful refrigerant gases,” said Timur Sirman, Co-Managing Director of MAGNOTHERM.

The technology is based on the magnetocaloric effect, where materials such as lanthanum-iron-silicon alloys (LaFeSi) change temperature when exposed to a magnetic field. This principle offers potential efficiency gains of 30–50% compared to conventional hydrogen liquefaction systems.

“Our method offers significant advantages for hydrogen liquefaction,” said Dr. Tino Gottschall, scientist at HZDR. “With the MAGNOTHERM joint lab at HZDR, we aim to reduce liquefaction costs to below €1.50 per kilogram of hydrogen, compared to conventional plants.”
Share
Get the daily refrigeration briefing
Trusted by 3,000+ refrigeration professionals worldwide
By subscribing, you create a free Refindustry account and agree to our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.
No spam. Only industry-relevant news.
Unsubscribe anytime.

Related news

EXKAL joins Spanish refrigeration science society SECYTEF
EXKAL has become part of SECYTEF, the Spanish Society of Refrigeration Science and Technology. The association promotes research, technological development, and innovation in refrigeration, h...
yesterday
Vertiv to acquire Italy’s ThermoKey for heat-rejection expansion
Vertiv has entered into an agreement to acquire ThermoKey S.p.A. as part of its investment in cooling solutions for high-density AI data centers. The transaction is expected to expand Vertiv’s ...
25 Mar 2026
Nidec launches liquid-cooling solutions website for AI data centers
Nidec Corporation announced the launch of its “Nidec Liquid-Cooling Solutions” website on April 7, 2026. The platform brings together the company’s latest liquid-cooling technologies and products f...
08 Apr 2026
Carrier Opens €12m Montluel HVAC and Data Centre Test Lab
Carrier announced a €12 million testing facility at its European Centre of Excellence in Montluel, France, expanding research and development capacity for cooling and heating technologies used in d...
09 Apr 2026
Qurie Enters German Market With Electrocaloric Cooling
Qurie GmbH, a spin-off from the Fraunhofer Institute for Physical Measurement Techniques IPM in Germany, is entering the market with caloric cooling technology. Founded in 2026, the company develop...
27 May 2026
Vertiv Cuts Cooling Energy Use at Acciona Data Centre in Spain
Vertiv has modernised the cooling infrastructure at Acciona’s corporate headquarters data centre in Madrid, delivering about a 70% reduction in cooling-related energy consumption, according to Acci...
21 May 2026