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Hydrogen technologies

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Hydrogen technologies are technologies that relate to the production and use of hydrogen. Hydrogen technologies are applicable for many uses.

Some hydrogen technologies are carbon neutral and could have a role in preventing climate change and a possible future hydrogen economy. Hydrogen is a chemical widely used in various applications including ammonia production, oil refining and energy.[1] Hydrogen is not a primary energy source, because it is not naturally occurring as a fuel. It is, however, widely regarded as an ideal energy storage medium, due to the ease with which electric power can convert water into its hydrogen and oxygen components through electrolysis and can be converted back to electrical power using a fuel cell. There are a wide number of different types of fuel and electrolysis cells.[2]

The potential environmental impact depends primarily on the methods used to generate the hydrogen fuel.

Fuel cells

Hydrogen infrastructure

Hydrogen storage

Hydrogen vehicles

Historic hydrogen filled airships

Hydrogen powered cars

Hydrogen fueling nozzle

Audi:

BMW:

Chrysler:

Daimler:

Fiat:

Ford:

Forze Hydrogen-Electric Racing Team Delft

General Motors:

Honda:

Hyundai:

Lotus Engineering:

Kia:

Mazda:

Mitsubishi:

Morgan:

Nissan:

Peugeot:

Renault:

Riversimple:

Ronn Motor Company:

Toyota:

Volkswagen:

Hydrogen powered planes

Possible future aircraft using precooled jet engines include Reaction Engines Skylon and the Reaction Engines A2.

Hydrogen powered rockets

The following rockets were/are partially or completely propelled by hydrogen fuel:

Environmental

Nuclear

Organic chemistry

Miscellaneous

See also

References

  1. ^ Badwal, Sukhvinder P.S.; Giddey, Sarbjit; Munnings, Christopher. "Hydrogen production via solid electrolytic routes". Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Energy and Environment. 2 (5): 473–487. doi:10.1002/wene.50.
  2. ^ Badwal, SPS (2014). "Emerging electrochemical energy conversion and storage technologies". Frontiers in Chemistry. 2: 79. doi:10.3389/fchem.2014.00079. PMC 4174133. PMID 25309898.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: unflagged free DOI (link)
  3. ^ netinform: Hydrogen and Fuel Cells
  4. ^ netinform: Hydrogen and Fuel Cells
  5. ^ netinform: Hydrogen and Fuel Cells
  6. ^ netinform: Hydrogen and Fuel Cells
  7. ^ "Ford Motor Company Business Plan", December 2, 2008
  8. ^ netinform: Hydrogen and Fuel Cells
  9. ^ netinform: Hydrogen and Fuel Cells
  10. ^ netinform: Hydrogen and Fuel Cells
  11. ^ First Drive: hydrogen-powered Kia Borrego FCEV and Nissan X-Trail FCV
  12. ^ netinform: Hydrogen and Fuel Cells
  13. ^ Dennis, Lyle. "Nissan Swears Off Hydrogen and Will Only Build Electric Cars", All Cars Electric, February 26, 2009
  14. ^ netinform: Hydrogen and Fuel Cells
  15. ^ Hydrogen Powered Tupolev Tu-155 Archived 2010-11-26 at the Wayback Machine Development of Cryogenic Fuel Aircraft, Tupelov