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  2. Fuel cell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fuel_cell

    Fuel cells for use in larger scale operations also show much promise. Portable power systems that use fuel cells can be used in the leisure sector (i.e. RVs, cabins, marine), the industrial sector (i.e. power for remote locations including gas/oil wellsites, communication towers, security, weather stations), and in the military sector.

  3. Stationary fuel-cell applications - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stationary_fuel-cell...

    Emergency power systems are a type of fuel cell system, which may include lighting, generators and other apparatus, to provide backup resources in a crisis or when regular systems fail. They find uses in a wide variety of settings from residential homes to hospitals , scientific laboratories, data centers , [ 6 ] telecommunication [ 7 ...

  4. High Temperature Proton Exchange Membrane fuel cell

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High_Temperature_Proton...

    HT-PEM fuel cell was developed in 1995 for operation at higher cell temperatures aiming at lower sensitivity of PEM fuel cells regarding impurities. [3] Thus HT-PEM fuel cell technology is one of the youngest fuel cell types and HT-PEM fuel cell systems are produced since the 21st century by several companies.

  5. Alkaline anion-exchange membrane fuel cell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alkaline_anion-exchange...

    The alkaline fuel cell used by NASA in 1960s for Apollo and Space Shuttle program generated electricity at nearly 70% efficiency using aqueous solution of KOH as an electrolyte. In that situation, CO 2 coming in through oxidant air stream and generated as by product from oxidation of methanol, if methanol is the fuel, reacts with electrolyte ...

  6. Microbial fuel cell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microbial_fuel_cell

    Microbial fuel cell (MFC) is a type of bioelectrochemical fuel cell system [1] also known as micro fuel cell that generates electric current by diverting electrons produced from the microbial oxidation of reduced compounds (also known as fuel or electron donor) on the anode to oxidized compounds such as oxygen (also known as oxidizing agent or electron acceptor) on the cathode through an ...

  7. SFC Energy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SFC_Energy

    SFC products are used to supply off-grid power to industrial, public and private users. According to the company, it had sold over 41,000 fuel cells by January 2019 [6] (January 2016: 34,000; January 2017: 35,000 [7]) for the leisure, industrial and defense & security sectors. SFC Energy's fuel cell systems are direct methanol fuel cells (DMFC ...

  8. Reformed methanol fuel cell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reformed_methanol_fuel_cell

    The fuel cartridge stores the methanol fuel. Depending on the system design either 100% methanol (IMPCA industrial standard) or a mixture of methanol with up to 40 vol% water is usually used as fuel for the RMFC system. 100% methanol results in lower fuel consumption than water-methanol mixture (Premix) but goes along with higher fuel cell system complexity for condensing of cathode moisture.

  9. Formic acid fuel cell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Formic_acid_fuel_cell

    Formic acid-based fuel cells represent a promising energy supply system in terms of high volumetric energy density, theoretical energy efficiency, and theoretical open-circuit voltage. They are also able to overcome certain problems inherent to traditional hydrogen (H 2) feed fuel cells such as safe handling, storage, and H 2 transportation.