No, body cells cannot use hydrogen on its own as a fuel. It needs to be included in a carbohydrate such as sugar, protein or fats.
no because hydrogen fuel cells are renewable
the fuel cells convert hydrogen into energy using a converter and that energy is used to power the vehicle
More mass is converted to energy in a fusion reaction than in a chemical reaction, such as that found in a fuel cell. - APEX
In fuel cells the hydrogen is oxidised to water. In fusion 2 different isotopes of hydrogen (deuterium and tritium) fuse together to form helium.
jaison
water
No. Hydrogen fuel cell is not a title. You would only capitalize hydrogen if it was at the beginning of a sentence, as I did with this one. Otherwise, you would say 'hydrogen fuel cell'.
hydrogen
pito
Some pros of fuel cells are that it is: -efficient -produces no odor, no noise -reliable -environmentally friendly -is indefinetely renewable, as long as hydrogen is harvested Some cons of fuel cells are: - fuel cells are expensive -you have to harvest hydrogen, which is hard -The volume of the fuel cells are larger than the average internal combustion engine.
They wouldn't know really know because hydrogen fuel cells isn't your ordinary sit-around-the-dinner-table conversation. Me, quite frankly, feel that it may be our future. One day when we get tired of using gasoline, hydrogen fuel cells will be the future!
You can use the hydrogen in fuel cells for power generation for a two wheeler motorcycle.