Bacteria and breadcrumbs could soon replace fossil fuels—and drastically lower harmful emissions.
Hydrogen has long been seen as the fuel of the future—a clean, efficient alternative to fossil fuels. But while it burns cleanly, most of today’s methods for making it still rely on dirty processes.
New solar reactor turns waste plastic and battery acid into hydrogen fuel and useful chemicals, offering a cleaner recycling ...
Sept. 11, 2003 — A new hydrogen gasification process which is modeled after a coal gasification process has been issued a patent pending. Using gasification technologies, hydrogen can cost around 20 ...
A team at the University of Edinburgh has shown that common E. coli bacteria can break down stale bread in an oxygen-free vessel, release hydrogen gas, and feed that hydrogen straight into chemical ...
A new study reveals how a simple, low-cost material could significantly boost the production of clean hydrogen fuel from ...
The new method converts mixed waste plastics into high-yield hydrogen gas and valuable graphene. Current hydrogen production, mostly 'gray' hydrogen, generates significant CO2 emissions; this new ...
A team of chemists at the University of Surrey has developed a process that converts stale bread into hydrogen gas using ...
OULU, Finland--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The City of Oulu, Finland, and French company Verso Energy have signed a co-operation agreement aiming to build a hydrogen processing plant in Oulu. Verso Energy ...
With apologies to Henry Cavendish, producing hydrogen in the lab was probably less fraught than producing final rules to implement the section 45V credit. Cavendish won a medal from the Royal Society ...