Morning Overview on MSN
New process upcycles PET plastic into fresh feedstocks while producing hydrogen
Researchers have developed electrochemical methods that break down waste PET plastic, the material in most disposable water ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Finnish scientists show green hydrogen production possible with semiconductor electrodes
Researchers have revealed that semiconductor electrodes can achieve green hydrogen production. They found that ...
Scientists in Europe are developing a new PFAS-free way to produce green hydrogen using far less of the rare metal iridium.
Researchers at the University of Jyväskylä (Finland) have led an international collaboration to study how semiconductor materials enable the production of green hydrogen through ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
Dual electrode system cracks seawater electrolysis deposit problem
A research team led by Dr. Ji-Hyung Han from the Convergence Research Center of Sector Coupling & Integration at the Korea ...
University of Tsukuba researchers develop highly durable electrodes for hydrogen production from seawater. The multi-elemental alloy electrode can sustain anode performance for over a decade, powered ...
The new funding will support pilot-scale manufacturing, customer validation, supply agreements, and expansion of engineering capacity ...
Researchers developed scalable MOF electrodes that lower hydrogen costs to $2.71 per kg, offering a practical path toward large-scale clean energy production. Hydrogen is increasingly viewed as a ...
Low-cost, durable electrolyzers (center) could use sustainable power from wind and solar to turn pure water into hydrogen gas that can fuel industrial plants as well as heavy vehicles. A University of ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Hydrogen-iron flow battery could deliver 25-year grid energy storage with 80% efficiency
A Dutch battery manufacturer has developed a revolutionary hydrogen-iron flow battery that could reportedly ...
Atomic-level simulations and electrochemical experiments reveal how charge centers called polarons form on semiconductor surfaces to activate green hydrogen production.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results