Hydrogen infrastructure solutions provider, GenH2 has said it now holds the ‘most’ active NASA patent license agreements by any private company, procured through NASA’s Technology Transfer Programme.
Currently holding 20 license agreements, specifically from the Kennedy Space Centre, the John H. Glenn Research Centre, and the Marshall Space Flight Centre, which it believes will aid in enabling the hydrogen value chain.
H2 View understands the patents cover areas including cryogenic testing, cryogenic solid storage, nozzle and value technologies, thermal insulation management systems, hydrogen and carbon dioxide monitoring technologies, leak detection systems, and solar and renewable energy technologies.
According to GenH2, it has successfully commercialised its NASA LCX license agreement, supporting the commercial application of a layered composite insulation system for non-vacuum applications and extreme environmental exposure conditions.
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