Interesting Engineering on MSN
New breakthrough could make 'green' hydrogen cheaper and faster to produce
Hydrogen has been touted as a potential replacement for fossil fuels in things like ships and planes. When used in fuel cells ...
Scientists have developed a new technique that doubles the amount of hydrogen produced when splitting water molecules with ...
A collaboration of researchers from various institutes in China has developed a novel approach that allows proton exchange membrane (PEM) electrolyzers to work with impure water, thereby helping ...
Many industries are eyeing up hydrogen as a source of clean energy, but with supplies of green hydrogen limited, we should ...
University of Alberta (U of A) researchers have discovered a method to harness sunlight and specialized materials to cleanly and efficiently split water into hydrogen and oxygen. If scaled, this could ...
In the future, we could fuel the world with sunlight and water – using sunlight to derive hydrogen fuel from H2O. Currently, most hydrogen that’s used as feedstock and fuel is derived from natural gas ...
Green hydrogen, which is made by splitting water with renewable energy, sometimes seems like a long-shot solution to climate change. But despite political and economic headwinds, the low-carbon ...
Anchoring single metal atoms on ultrathin supports improves catalyst efficiency and stability, making hydrogen production cleaner, more scalable, and less dependent on scarce metals. (Nanowerk ...
Graphitic Energy is operating a pilot plant using a new technique that extracts hydrogen from natural gas, simultaneously making high-value graphite in the process. Clean hydrogen has the potential to ...
Despite being the most abundant element in the universe, making cheap, clean hydrogen here on Earth has been a surprisingly tough nut to crack. “Hydrogen has always been plagued with a couple problems ...
Morning Overview on MSN
New breakthrough could make green hydrogen cheaper and faster
Green hydrogen has long been billed as the clean fuel that could decarbonize heavy industry, shipping, and long‑distance ...
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