hydrogen is produced through one if two methods:
- electrolysis of water - electricity passed through water to separate hydrogen and oxygen atoms
-steam-methane reforming - hydrogen extracted from methane
Steam methane reforming is the most common, but produces CO2 as a by-product, which contributes to global warming.
The only byproduct of using pure hydrogen as a fuel is water, often in vapor form.
Hydrogen gas cannot be directly installed in a carburetor designed for liquid fuel. However, hydrogen can be used as a fuel source in a hydrogen fuel cell vehicle, where it reacts with oxygen to produce electricity that powers the vehicle's electric motor.
Yes, the only byproduct of hydrogen is water.
hydrogen was first exploited as a fuel in Aviation in the 1920's and 30's. German engineers used it as a Booster fuel in the zeppelins" (page 182 of the hydrogen economy by Jeremy Rifkin). hydrogen was first exploited as a fuel in Aviation in the 1920's and 30's. German engineers used it as a Booster fuel in the zeppelins" (page 182 of the hydrogen economy by Jeremy Rifkin). hydrogen was first exploited as a fuel in Aviation in the 1920's and 30's. German engineers used it as a Booster fuel in the zeppelins" (page 182 of the hydrogen economy by Jeremy Rifkin).
The Answer Is The Cost Is 25000000 And that's the answer.
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'.
It would be great, but hydrogen is horribly unstable.
There are a few different types of vehicles that use hydrogen fuel. You can find cars and other forms of transport that use hydrogen, but the biggest consumer would have to be hydrogen fueled space rockets.
Hydrogen fuels could be an alternative if we come to a point where we can solve all the dangerous problems with hydrogen. Hydrogen fuels would be a good alternative but at this point and time hydrogen is way to unstable, so for now electric and ethanol are the way to go for an alternate fuel source.
Hydrogen used as a fuel can be produced through various methods such as electrolysis of water, steam methane reforming, or through by-product processes in industries like chlor-alkali. These methods allow us to generate hydrogen without relying solely on fossil fuels.
Fuel, Oxygen and Heat Fuel, Oxygen and Heat Fuel, Oxygen and Heat
Hydrogen is the simplest element in the universe. Combining hydrogen and oxygen in a fuel cell would produce energy without pollution.
Hydrogen tanks on the few experimental cars that are using the fuel tend to keep the fuel tank above the passenger compartment. Should a rupture occur in the tank, fuel would float away and above the problem. This makes hydrogen a fairly safe fuel.
Hydrogen could be an excellent fuel for automobiles. The unfortunate part though is that hydrogen is currently made through the stripping of natural gas, so hydrogen would still be using fossil fuels with our current technology.
Water is the benefit of a hydrogen fuel cell ;)
well its cause they didn't produce it
It would be simplistic to claim that hydrogen is a bad fuel, but hydrogen does present certain complications as a fuel. Because it is a gas, it is not as easy to store as a liquid fuel such as gasoline. And depending upon how it is stored, it is more likely to explode, in the event of an accident, than gasoline would be. But in some ways hydrogen is an excellent fuel. The only combustion product of burning hydrogen is water. It is completely nonpolluting. And since hydrogen can be made from water (by electrolysis) there is in principle an unlimited supply, as long as you can generate the electricity needed to perform the electrolysis.