South Korean company Doosan Enerbility Co. is embarking on a groundbreaking project to develop and demonstrate a high-efficiency H-class large hydrogen turbine technology using purely domestic resources.
Browsing: Innovation
Norwegian-based company Norsk Hydro ASA has achieved a significant milestone in the decarbonization of aluminum production by successfully manufacturing the world’s first batch of aluminum using green hydrogen.
Australian clean energy company Endua has unveiled the first of its purpose-built standalone hydrogen power banks, which it says are designed to close the gap in microgrid applications where the need for reliable power means reliance on emissions-heavy energy production such as diesel generators.
A team of scientists from the Ural Federal University (UrFU) and the Institute of High-Temperature Electrochemistry (IHTE) of the Ural Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences has achieved a significant breakthrough in the development of solid oxide fuel cells (SOFC) by synthesizing zinc-doped lanthanum-containing perovskite.
Chinese steelmaker HBIS Group has made significant progress in its hydrogen metallurgy project, successfully producing direct reduced iron (DRI) products using hydrogen.
Smoltek Nanotech Holding AB’s subsidiary, Smoltek Hydrogen, has officially opened its state-of-the-art hydrogen laboratory.
When it comes to turning, trains and automobiles differ significantly. While cars have blinking turn signal levers to indicate left or right turns, trains lack such a feature.
French automaker Ligier Automotive has partnered with German engineering company Bosch to develop a hydrogen-powered sports car based on its Ligier JS2 R model.
First Hydrogen, a leading developer of hydrogen fuel cell systems for commercial vehicles, has signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with the Hydrogen Research Institute (HRI) at the Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières (UQTR) to support the sustainable energy transition in Quebec.
“The holy grail” of the energy future – hydrogen may soon have a very serious problem, which, if not solved quickly, will bring the whole “hydrogen revolution” to a halt for us. This is caused by the already absolute certainty that hydrogen in the Earth’s atmosphere reacts with tropospheric hydroxyl (OH) radicals. Therefore, its uncontrolled emission into the atmosphere disturbs the distribution and holds dangerously the decomposition of methane, ozone or water vapour, which can lead us, in the short term, to a possible climate cataclysm.