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Hyting Completes Durability Test for Hydrogen Heat Generator

Maílis Carrilho
Maílis Carrilho
Updated on October 24th, 2025
Hyting Completes Durability Test for Hydrogen Heat Generator
3 min read
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German clean-tech company Hyting GmbH has announced the successful completion of a 2,500-hour durability test of its hydrogen-to-heat generator, the HG10. The test simulated around ten years of continuous operation, with no recorded failures or noticeable component wear. This result demonstrates the technology’s reliability and long-term performance in real-world conditions.

The test validates Hyting’s approach to producing heat through a flameless catalytic process rather than combustion. This method combines hydrogen with oxygen from the air to create heat without generating carbon dioxide, nitrogen oxides, or particulates.

Zero-Emission Hydrogen Heating

Unlike conventional gas boilers, Hyting’s system produces only water vapor as a byproduct. The catalytic process allows for complete combustion of hydrogen at lower temperatures, ensuring zero-emission operation and higher thermal efficiency. The system is designed for a wide range of applications, from industrial process heat to building and mobility heating.

The company’s modular design currently supports units ranging from 10 kW to 50 kW, with a 150 kW version in development. The smaller models are expected to serve individual buildings or small commercial users, while larger units could replace fossil-fuel boilers in industrial processes.

Market Applications and Certification

Hyting’s hydrogen heat generator has received European Gas Appliance Regulation (GAR) certification, allowing the system to move toward commercial deployment in the European market. The company’s collaboration with established engineering and manufacturing partners is expected to accelerate production and reduce costs.

Target applications include industrial and commercial building heating, low- to medium-temperature process heat, and mobile energy systems. The ability to retrofit existing infrastructure makes the system suitable for sectors where electrification through heat pumps is technically or economically challenging.

Role in Decarbonising Heat

Heating remains one of the hardest sectors to decarbonise, responsible for a large share of industrial and building emissions. Technologies like Hyting’s hydrogen-to-heat system can complement electrification by addressing applications requiring high temperatures or continuous thermal loads.

If powered by renewable or low-carbon hydrogen, such systems could significantly cut emissions in areas where heat pumps are less efficient. The durability test result supports the technical readiness of hydrogen heating solutions, suggesting they could soon play a practical role in achieving net-zero goals.

Next Steps and Challenges

Despite strong test results, hydrogen heating faces challenges before large-scale deployment. Key factors include the availability of green hydrogen, the cost of production and distribution, and safety regulations for hydrogen use in buildings.

Hyting’s progress marks a positive technical milestone, but broader success will depend on hydrogen supply chains, infrastructure, and policy support. Continued field trials and partnerships will be essential to bring hydrogen-based heating systems from prototype to widespread use.

Source: www.renewableenergymagazine.com


Maílis Carrilho
Written by:
Maílis Carrilho
Sustainability Research Analyst
Maílis Carrilho is a Sustainability Research Analyst (Intern) at Net Zero Compare, contributing research and analysis on climate tech, carbon policies, and sustainable solutions. She supports the team in developing fact-based content and insights to help companies and readers navigate the evolving sustainability landscape.

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