Hi, ILites
I will be putting my poems, stories and brain teaser games in this blog. You are welcome to visit and post your comments.
Regards,
TDU
I will be putting my poems, stories and brain teaser games in this blog. You are welcome to visit and post your comments.
Regards,
TDU
Exotic scientific discoveries of our era-4
Posted 27th November 2007 at 06:04 AM by Tamildownunder
Dear ILites,
Those of you who have read my serial story 'Vigyani' will remember the machine I was mentioning that will produce water from air. This Fuel cell is one such machine and once developed and produced in mass numbers it will be a great boon to India in electricity generation and water production in all villages and remote places. The National Institute of Standards and Technology here in U.S where I am working is engaged in the development of these fuel cells.
In 2003, President Bush announced a program called the Hydrogen Fuel Initiative (HFI) during his State of the Union Address. This initiative, supported by legislation in the Energy Policy Act of 2005 (EPACT 2005) and the Advanced Energy Initiative of 2006, aims to develop hydrogen, fuel cell and infrastructure technologies to make fuel-cell vehicles practical and cost-effective by 2020. The United States has dedicated more than one billion dollars to fuel cell research and development so far.
Sir William Grove invented the first fuel cell in 1839. Grove knew that water could be split into hydrogen and oxygen by sending an electric current through it (a process called electrolysis). He hypothesized that by reversing the procedure you could produce electricity and water. He created a primitive fuel cell and called it a gas voltaic battery. After experimenting with his new invention, Grove proved his hypothesis. Fifty years later, scientists Ludwig Mond and Charles Langer coined the term fuel cell while attempting to build a practical model to produce electricity.
A fuel cell is an electrochemical device that combines hydrogen and oxygen to produce electricity, with water and heat as its by-product. As long as fuel is supplied, the fuel cell will continue to generate power. Since the conversion of the fuel to energy takes place via an electrochemical process, not combustion, the process is clean, quiet and highly efficient – two to three times more efficient than fuel burning.
No other energy generation technology offers the combination of benefits that fuel cells do. In addition to low or zero emissions, benefits include high efficiency and reliability, multi-fuel capability, siting flexibility, durability, scalability and ease of maintenance. Fuel cells operate silently, so they reduce noise pollution as well as air pollution and the waste heat from a fuel cell can be used to provide hot water or space heating for a home or office.
The biggest application of fuel cells will be in automobiles reducing the cost, dependence on supply of oil, reducing global warming etc.
Those of you who have read my serial story 'Vigyani' will remember the machine I was mentioning that will produce water from air. This Fuel cell is one such machine and once developed and produced in mass numbers it will be a great boon to India in electricity generation and water production in all villages and remote places. The National Institute of Standards and Technology here in U.S where I am working is engaged in the development of these fuel cells.
In 2003, President Bush announced a program called the Hydrogen Fuel Initiative (HFI) during his State of the Union Address. This initiative, supported by legislation in the Energy Policy Act of 2005 (EPACT 2005) and the Advanced Energy Initiative of 2006, aims to develop hydrogen, fuel cell and infrastructure technologies to make fuel-cell vehicles practical and cost-effective by 2020. The United States has dedicated more than one billion dollars to fuel cell research and development so far.
Sir William Grove invented the first fuel cell in 1839. Grove knew that water could be split into hydrogen and oxygen by sending an electric current through it (a process called electrolysis). He hypothesized that by reversing the procedure you could produce electricity and water. He created a primitive fuel cell and called it a gas voltaic battery. After experimenting with his new invention, Grove proved his hypothesis. Fifty years later, scientists Ludwig Mond and Charles Langer coined the term fuel cell while attempting to build a practical model to produce electricity.
A fuel cell is an electrochemical device that combines hydrogen and oxygen to produce electricity, with water and heat as its by-product. As long as fuel is supplied, the fuel cell will continue to generate power. Since the conversion of the fuel to energy takes place via an electrochemical process, not combustion, the process is clean, quiet and highly efficient – two to three times more efficient than fuel burning.
No other energy generation technology offers the combination of benefits that fuel cells do. In addition to low or zero emissions, benefits include high efficiency and reliability, multi-fuel capability, siting flexibility, durability, scalability and ease of maintenance. Fuel cells operate silently, so they reduce noise pollution as well as air pollution and the waste heat from a fuel cell can be used to provide hot water or space heating for a home or office.
The biggest application of fuel cells will be in automobiles reducing the cost, dependence on supply of oil, reducing global warming etc.
Total Comments 1
Comments
| | Interesting to read about fuel cells... Havent heard about it so its very interesting to read...also must wait and see how the research and funding will work out...keep blogin.. |
Posted 27th November 2007 at 07:48 AM by Anandchitra |
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