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Hydrogen Fuel Cells

 

What Is A Hydrogen Fuel Cell?

   

 

A fuel cell is a device that produces electricity directly from hydrogen fuel, its application can be for anything that requires power in the form of electricity, rotary power or heat. A unique characteristic of all fuel cells is that they can be made small enough to power a cellular phone or large enough to power a town, without significantly changing the design. Therefore the markets for fuel cells are virtually unlimited.

Some major applications include all ground or surface vehicles, such as cars, utility vehicles, trains, boats, jet skis, snow mobiles, motorcycles, etc. There are also applications in power production, such as commercial utility power, remote power and portable power production.

Fuel cells have been used to produce electricity and water in all our Gemini, Apollo and Space Shuttle missions. Now, what once was exotic technology is about to become commonplace.

In the future, however, hydrogen will join electricity as an important energy carrier, since it can be made safely from renewable energy sources and is virtually non-polluting. It will also be used as a fuel for ?zero-emissions? vehicles, to heat homes and offices, to produce electricity, and to fuel aircraft. Cost is the major obstacle.

The first widespread use of hydrogen will probably be as an additive to transportation fuels. Hydrogen can be combined with gasoline, ethanol, methanol, and natural gas to increase performance and reduce pollution. Adding just five percent hydrogen to gasoline can reduce nitrogen oxide (NOX) emissions by 30 to 40 percent in today's engines.

An engine converted to burn pure hydrogen produces only water and minor amounts of NOX as exhaust.

 

A few hydrogen-powered vehicles are on the road today, but it will probably be 10-20 years before you can walk into your local car dealer and drive away in one. Finding hydrogen fuel today might be difficult. Hydrogen Fuel Cell

Can you imagine how huge the task would be to quickly change the gasoline-powered transportation system we have today? (Just think of the thousands of filling stations across the country, and the production and distribution systems that serve them.) Change will come slowly to this industry, but hydrogen is a versatile fuel; it can be used in many ways.

The space shuttle uses hydrogen fuel cells (batteries) to run its computer systems. The fuel cells basically reverse electrolysis - hydrogen and oxygen are combined to produce electricity. Hydrogen fuel cells are very efficient and produce only water as a by-product, but they are expensive to build.

With technological advances, small fuel cells could someday power electric vehicles and larger fuel cells could provide electricity in remote areas.

Because of the cost, hydrogen will not produce electricity on a wide scale in the near future. It may, though, be added to natural gas to reduce emissions from existing power plants.

As the production of electricity from renewables increases, so will the need for energy storage and transportation. Many of these sources? especially solar and wind are located far from population centers and produce electricity only part of the time. Hydrogen may be the perfect carrier for this energy. It can store the energy and distribute it to wherever it is needed. It is estimated that transmitting electricity long distances is four times more expensive than shipping hydrogen by pipeline.

 

 
 

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This site will serve as an international platform of information as this technology emerges.

Contact Greg at info@hydrogen-fuel.org