+ ~20kg increased safety standards for the tub (as well as the minimum cockpit dimensions being physically larger)
+ ~17kg larger wheels & tyres
+ ~1kg wheel covers
+ ~1kg BBS wheels a little heavier than the original OZ wheels
+ larger brakes
+ front wheel aero fairing
+ stronger wheel tethers
[Edit, I missed one: +1kg on the minimum power unit weight from 150 in 2021 to 151kg in 2022, not sure why.]
The rest is miscellaneous I guess. But you can rest assured that approximately half the increase is due to all-important safety improvements.
Ross Brawn, F1:
"There's a lot of new safety initiatives after the terrible accident in Spa a couple of years ago in F2, and the accident with [Romain] Grosjean, and one or two other things. So the weight limit, or the weight of the cars, increased."
Simone Resta, HAAS:
"And last but not least I think the weight has been a real struggle, I suppose for everyone, because the amount of things that changed on the car โ tyres, rims, brakes, safety requirements, bodywork etcetera โ has induced a massive amount of weight increase on the cars which we really fought hard to try to contain, so that has been a really important point for all the project."
Mike Krack, Aston Martin:
"There has been a lot of changes also for safety, so most teams I think we have found out are struggling with this minimum."
Edit -- If we go further back and compare 2014 690kg to 2022 798kg, we have:
+ 5kg increased driver allowance from 75kg to 80kg
+ increased power unit weight allowance
+ ~20kg for halo & halo mounting reinforcements
+ ~10kg for intermediate increases in crash testing difficulty
+ ~20kg 2022 safety increases
+ ~5kg wider tyres in 2017
+ ~19kg larger wheels, wheel covers in 2022
So most of the 108kg difference can be explained logically, and over half is due to safety improvements.