Fuel cell automobiles primarily use hydrogen gas as their fuel source. In a fuel cell, hydrogen reacts with oxygen from the air to produce electricity, water, and heat, which powers the vehicle. This process emits only water vapor as a byproduct, making fuel cell vehicles environmentally friendly. Some fuel cells can also utilize other fuels, but hydrogen is the most common and efficient for automotive applications.
Hydrogen gas
Hydrogen gas
gas (btw im not talking about the nasty kind) im talking the fuel you buy at the gas station.
Fuel cell automobiles primarily use hydrogen gas as fuel. In these vehicles, hydrogen is stored in tanks and is then converted into electricity through a chemical reaction with oxygen in the fuel cell. This process produces electricity to power the vehicle's electric motor, with water vapor being the only byproduct. Thus, hydrogen fuel cells offer a clean alternative to traditional fossil fuel-powered vehicles.
The gas (or fuel) filler-neck (or tube).
No, fuel-cell automobiles do not use gas as a fuel. They use hydrogen gas as a fuel source, which is converted into electricity to power the vehicle.
Fuel cells come in many varieties. Low-temperature designs such as proton exchange membrane fuel cells [PEMFC's, also known as polymer electrolyte membrane fuel cells] are mostly aimed at portable and transport applications
Fuel cells operate by combining hydrogen and oxygen without actual combustion as in gasoline engines. A catalyst separates the electrons and protons to combine the elements. (Some versions of fuel cells are high-temperature only.) Hydrogen gas
15 pounds of air to 1 pound of gas
You'd need to drop your fuel tank and drain it out.
E85 or gas.
obviously gas obviously gas