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Fuel cells combine hydrogen and oxygen to produce electricity, heat, and water as long as fuel is supplied without losing charge. Hydrogen is a common and versatile energy carrier that can power many energy needs, and fuel cells efficiently capture and use hydrogen's power to do so, making hydrogen an energy carrier.
Fuel cells combine hydrogen and oxygen to produce electricity, heat, and water as long as fuel is supplied without losing charge. Hydrogen is a common and versatile energy carrier that can power many energy needs, and fuel cells efficiently capture and use hydrogen's power to do so, making hydrogen an energy carrier.
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Fuel cells combine hydrogen and oxygen to produce electricity, heat, and water as long as fuel is supplied without losing charge. Hydrogen is a common and versatile energy carrier that can power many energy needs, and fuel cells efficiently capture and use hydrogen's power to do so, making hydrogen an energy carrier.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Formatos disponibles
Descargue como PPTX, PDF, TXT o lea en línea desde Scribd
A fuel cell combines H2 and O2 to produce electricity, heat, and water. The fuel cell will produce electricity as long as the fuel (hydrogen) is supplied, never losing its charge.
Merely a energy carrier
Hydrogen is one of the most common elements used in fuel cells. It is a versatile energy carrier that can be used to power nearly every end-use energy need. The fuel cell an energy conversion device that can efficiently capture and use the power of hydrogen is the key to making it happen