According to a recent LinkedIn post from Ayrton Energy, the company is positioning its technology around the challenges of using recycled, or waste‑derived, hydrogen rather than only green hydrogen. The post highlights that many existing hydrogen systems assume high gas purity, which can make projects using contaminated hydrogen streams more complex and costly.
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The post suggests that recycled hydrogen streams often contain methane and other impurities, requiring multi‑step pre‑treatment that limits where such hydrogen can be economically captured and used. Ayrton Energy indicates that its approach is designed for these real‑world conditions, enabling methane removal in a single step while simultaneously storing hydrogen in liquid organic hydrogen carrier (LOHC) fluid.
By emphasizing simpler processing, less equipment, and closed‑loop operation with imperfect gas streams, the post implies a potential cost and deployment advantage in segments where waste hydrogen is abundant. For investors, this focus could position Ayrton Energy to tap industrial byproduct hydrogen markets and support broader hydrogen infrastructure build‑out, potentially improving scalability and long‑term adoption prospects if the technology proves competitive in practice.

