Yes, of course. It takes raw materials and engergy to produce a hydrogen fuel cell. It then takes raw materials and energy to produce the hydrogen fuel. However, the result of the hydrogen fuel cell combustion is water - this is a significant improvement over regular internal combustion engines which produce all kinds of exhaust fumes.
Assuming hydrogren fuel cells become wide spread then society will change in many ways from new jobs and new fuel refineries/distribution to new language/slang for the HFCs etc...
Water is the benefit of a hydrogen fuel cell ;)
The fuel cell hydrogen is one of the two gasses, that are created by the seperations of a water molecule H2O. A water molecule consists of H - hydrogen, and O - oxygen. A fuel cell hydrogen is the gas created by the separation of a water molecule with the help of a fuel cell.
There are no commercially available hydrogen fueled cars.
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'.
A hydrogen fuel cell is a type of electrochemical cell that produces electricity by combining hydrogen and oxygen to generate power. The key difference is that in a hydrogen fuel cell, the reactants (hydrogen and oxygen) are continuously supplied externally to sustain the electricity generation process, while in a typical electrochemical cell, the reactants are contained within the cell and eventually get depleted.
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.
Hydrogen Fuel Cell converts the thermal energy released directly into electrical energy.. This fuel cell was used in the Apollo Programe. It also produces water.....
yes it type of fuel
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.
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 cell cars seem to be the wave of the future. This website gives you links to all of the dealers with available hydrogen fuel cell cars: http://www.fueleconomy.gov/feg/fcv_links.shtml
jaison