Nexceris Honored to Make 2024 Fast 50 List
Nexceris has made the Columbus Business First Fast 50 list. The Fast 50 list consists of the fastest-growing businesses in Central Ohio, showing tremendous growth year after year.
Nexceris has made the Columbus Business First Fast 50 list. The Fast 50 list consists of the fastest-growing businesses in Central Ohio, showing tremendous growth year after year.
During his visit to Columbus for the 54th Annual Midwest U.S.-Japan (MWJA) Conference Sept. 9-10, Gov. Taizo Mikazuki of the Shiga Prefecture made a significant stop
Nexceris and Fuel Cell Materials (FCM) are excited to participate in Hydrogen + Fuel Cells (H2 + FC) EUROPE, Europe’s largest trade fair for hydrogen and fuel cells. H2 + FC EUROPE offers a unique combination of exhibitions, two forum areas, and networking events to promote synergy and cross-industry cooperation between different technologies dedicated to solving global energy challenges.
As part of our commitment to the solid oxide fuel cell and electrolysis (SOFC and SOEC) research community, FCM is pleased to offer several different solutions to test your single fuel cell and electrolyzer cell samples with both our Planar Manifold Test Fixture Kits and the ProboStat Button Cell Test Fixture System.
Nexceris (also known as NexTech Materials), a green energy company in central Ohio, received a $30-million grant from the U.S. Department of Energy to scale up production of its electrolysis stack technology.
Data centers are physical facilities that organizations use to house their critical applications and data. A data center’s design is based on a network of computer and storage resources that enable the delivery of shared applications and data.
Gigafactories are specialized ultra-large volume production facilities for manufacturing lithium-ion (Li-ion) battery cells used for EVs and battery energy storage systems (BESS). The name is reflective of the capacity of the plant to build battery cells measured in gigawatts (GW) annually.
As the world pauses today to celebrate Women and Girls in Science, one woman in Central Ohio is hoping that we can encourage a little more camaraderie and a little less competition in the STEM fields.
Susanna Tanck, an engineer at Nexceris, a Lewis Center, Ohio-based, renewable energy-focused company, said while she hopes we can achieve more equity and intersectionality for women in STEM, she feels that we might encourage more young women to study STEM subjects if we make more room for them.
Judy Garzanich got her start in science as a fallback career when the gig she really wanted was unavailable.
“When I was a kid, I desperately wanted to be a wizard, and I was crushed when I got old enough to realize that wasn’t possible,” Garzanich remembered. “While in high school, my chemistry teacher performed and had us perform fun experiments that got me interested in chemistry, and I realized it was the closest I could get to using magic as an adult.”