| This article is incomplete, and may require expansion or cleanup. Please help to improve the article, or discuss the issue on the talk page. |
Hydrogen technologies are technologies that relate to the production and use of hydrogen. Hydrogen technologies are applicable for many uses.
Some hydrogen technologies are carbon neutral and could have a role in preventing climate change and a possible future hydrogen economy.
The following list gives links to articles related to hydrogen technologies:
Fuel Cells
Hydrogen Infrastructure
Hydrogen Vehicles
Contents |
Fuel cells
- Alkaline fuel cell (AFC)
- Direct borohydride fuel cell (DBFC)
- Direct carbon fuel cell (DCFC)
- Direct-ethanol fuel cell (DEFC)
- Direct methanol fuel cell (DMFC)
- Electro-galvanic fuel cell (EGFC)
- Flow Battery (RFC)
- Formic acid fuel cell (FAFC)
- Metal Hydride fuel cell (MHFC)
- Microbial Fuel Cell (MFC)
- Molten-carbonate fuel cell (MCFC)
- Phosphoric-acid fuel cell (PAFC)
- Photoelectrochemical cell (PEC)
- Proton exchange membrane fuel cell (PEMFC)
- Protonic Ceramic Fuel Cell (PCFC)
- Regenerative fuel cell (RFC)
- Solid-oxide fuel cell (SOFC)
Hydrogen infrastructure
- Hydrogen pipeline transport
- Compressed hydrogen tube trailer
- Liquid hydrogen tank truck
- Hydrogen piping
- Hydrogen station
- Homefueler
- Home Energy Station
- Hydrogen highway
- Zero Regio
- Hydrogen compressor
- Hydrogen leak testing
- Hydrogen sensor
- Hydrogen purifier
- Hydrogen analyzer
- Hydrogen valve
Hydrogen storage
- Compressed hydrogen
- Cryo-adsorption
- Liquid hydrogen
- Slush hydrogen
- Underground hydrogen storage
- Hydrogen tank
Hydrogen vehicles
Historic hydrogen filled airships
Hydrogen powered cars
- Ford Fuel Cell Focus
- BMW H2R
- BMW Hydrogen 7
- Chrysler Natrium
- Fiat Panda Hydrogen
- Fuel Cell Bus Club
- General Motors Hy-wire
- General Motors Sequel
- Honda FCX
- Mercedes-Benz F-Cell
- Morgan LIFEcar
- Peugeot Quark
- Honda FCX Clarity
Hydrogen powered planes
- Hyfish
- Smartfish
- Tupolev Tu-155-hydrogen-powered version of Tu-154[1]
Possible future aircraft using precooled jet engines include Reaction Engines Skylon and the Reaction Engines A2.
Hydrogen powered rockets
The following rockets were partially or completely propelled by hydrogen fuel:
Related technologies
Hydrogen is not in and of itself an energy source, because it is not naturally occurring as a fuel. The potential environmental impact depends primarily on the methods used to generate the hydrogen fuel.
Environmental
Nuclear
Organic chemistry
Miscellaneous
- Hydrogen odorant
- Atomic hydrogen welding
- Hydrogen-cooled turbogenerator
- Oxyhydrogen flame
- Low hydrogen annealing
- Standard hydrogen electrode
- Palladium-Hydrogen electrode
- Cathodic protection
- Iron-hydrogen resistor
- Hofmann voltameter
- Hydrox
- Hydreliox
- Joule-Thomson effect
- Hydrogen ion
- Bussard ramjet
- Döbereiner's lamp
- Nickel hydrogen battery
- Gas-absorption refrigerator
- Diaphragm compressor
- Thermal hydrogen compressor
- Electrochemical compression
- Electroosmotic pump
- Temperature-programmed reduction
- Hydrogen damage
- Hydrogen embrittlement
See also
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Hydrogen technologies |
References
- ^ Hydrogen Powered Tupolev Tu-155 Development of Cryogenic Fuel Aircraft, Tupelov
|
||||||||||||||
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)



