Fuel cell types

The main types of fuel cell

"Fuel cell" is really a family of technologies, not one device. They all do the same job — turn fuel and oxygen into electricity without combustion — but they run at different temperatures, use different electrolytes, and suit very different jobs.

The five you'll hear about

How to think about the trade-off

The basic tension is temperature versus flexibility. Low-temperature cells (PEM) start fast and fit in vehicles but demand clean hydrogen. High-temperature cells (SOFC, MCFC) are more efficient and fuel-flexible but want to run steadily, which makes them better for buildings and grids than for stop-and-go driving.

Bottom line. There's no single "best" fuel cell — there's a best fit for each job. Matching the chemistry to the use case is most of the engineering story.

Explore each type

About the author — George Howell Ward is a long-time clean-energy advocate and early adopter, not a licensed engineer, energy professional, or scientist. He holds a B.S. in Civil Engineering from the University of California, Berkeley, and writes here as an enthusiast and technologist. These guides are educational, draw on legitimate science only, and avoid debunked claims. His interest goes back over a decade: he was an early hydrogen fuel-cell enthusiast who promoted the technology through hands-on demonstrations — including hydrogen fuel-cell model cars — and attended a multi-day fuel-cell seminar hosted by UC Irvine's National Fuel Cell Research Center. (Mentioning the Center is descriptive only — it does not imply the Center endorses George, this site, or its content.)
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