When it is burned though large amount of heat is obtained only by-product is water which isn't a pollutant. This is in very pure state and can be made use.
Hydrogen peroxide can be used in certain types of fuel cells called direct borohydride fuel cells. In these fuel cells, hydrogen peroxide is used as an oxidant in place of oxygen. However, the efficiency and practicality of using hydrogen peroxide in fuel cells is still being researched and developed.
The reactants in a fuel cell are typically hydrogen and oxygen. The hydrogen is usually supplied as a fuel source to the anode, while oxygen is supplied to the cathode.
Hydrogen fuel cells combine hydrogen with oxygen from the air to produce electricity, heat, and water as byproducts. This process is known as electrochemical conversion.
Fuel cells primarily rely on hydrogen as their energy source. Hydrogen gas is fed into the fuel cell where it reacts with oxygen to produce electricity, heat, and water as byproducts.
Hydrogen is typically stored in a compressed or liquid form and then fed into a fuel cell. The hydrogen reacts with the electrolyte in the fuel cell to produce electricity, water, and heat. The process is efficient and does not produce harmful emissions.
Green Wheels - 2007 Hydrogen Fuel Cell was released on: USA: 22 August 2008
Water is the benefit of a hydrogen fuel cell ;)
Green fuel refers to any alternative fuel source that has a lower environmental impact compared to traditional fossil fuels. Examples include biodiesel, ethanol, hydrogen, and electricity generated from renewable sources such as solar or wind energy. These fuels are typically produced from sustainable resources and help reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
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'.
Fuels cells do not actually store electricity. They generate it instead, using hydrogen and oxygen as 'fuel'. The oxygen is atmospheric, the hydrogen must be stored under pressure and delivered to the cell through piping. So it's hydrogen that is being 'stored', not electricity as in a battery. Inside the fuel cell, atoms of hydrogen and oxygen combine into water across a special membrane which produces electricity from the resulting energy of chemical combination of the atoms. The "exhaust" of a fuel cell is therefore pure water, making them very 'green' to operate. The problem is producing hydrogen is a green manner - much harder to do, unless you're a plant with chlorophyll that can do photosynthesis using sunlight, the ultimate green technology. Another problem is storing and distributing hydrogen gas under pressure. It is very dangerous in some ways, remember the Hindenburg!
no because hydrogen fuel cells are renewable
There are currently no hydrogen powered cars commercially available. These cars would be far from green in any event because of the way we make hydrogen currently. Hydrogen is currently made by stripping hydrogen from natural gas and venting the rest of the material to the air.
There are currently no hydrogen powered cars commercially available. These cars would be far from green in any event because of the way we make hydrogen currently. Hydrogen is currently made by stripping hydrogen from natural gas and venting the rest of the material to the air.
Hydrogen can be used as fuel.
There are no commercially available hydrogen fueled cars.
Hydrogen can be used as fuel in carsbecause it don't cause any pollution
Hydrogen has the highest calorific value, which should make it good fuel