Tech Xplore on MSN
Solar hydrogen can now be produced efficiently, no platinum required
A research team led by Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden, has presented a new way to produce hydrogen gas without the ...
A research team led by Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden, have presented a new way to produce hydrogen gas without the scarce and expensive metal platinum, using sunlight, ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Solar system swaps O2 for sugar to cut green hydrogen costs
Green hydrogen has long been billed as a clean fuel for heavy industry, shipping, and long-duration storage, but its price ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Breakthrough method produces hydrogen using plastic without scarce, expensive platinum
Using sunlight, water and tiny particles of electrically conductive plastic, researchers produced hydrogen efficiently, ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Solar-powered system swaps oxygen for sugar to slash green hydrogen production costs
A new solar-electrolysis system uses a copper-doped catalyst to turn farm waste into hydrogen and valuable formate.
A research team led by Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden, have presented a new way to produce hydrogen gas without ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Japan boosts solar hydrogen by capturing longer wavelengths of sunlight
Japan is pushing solar hydrogen into a new phase by teaching its materials to drink in colors of sunlight that used to go to ...
An international team of researchers has used electrically conductive plastic in place of platinum to harvest hydrogen ...
The 505 MW Wind and Solar Power to Hydrogen Integrated Green Ammonia Synthesis Project, owned by Shenneng North Control Company in Otog Banner, has been successfully connected to the grid, injecting ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
Harnessing long-wavelength light for sustainable hydrogen production
A novel dye-sensitized photocatalyst developed at Science Tokyo enables the capture of long-wavelength visible light for efficient hydrogen conversion, surpassing conventional photocatalysts.
Researchers in China and Singapore have developed a new way to use solar energy and biomass to make cheaper green hydrogen.
Michigan energy systems company Sesame Solar announced this week what it calls the world's first 100-percent renewable mobile nanogrid. Powered by both its wing-like solar panel spread and green ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results