enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Water fuel cell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_fuel_cell

    The water was subjected to an electrical resonance that dissociated it into its basic atomic make-up. The water fuel cell would split the water into hydrogen and oxygen gas, which would then be combusted back into water vapor in a conventional internal combustion engine to produce net energy. [2]

  3. Water-fuelled car - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water-fuelled_car

    To fuel a hydrogen car from water, electricity is used to generate hydrogen by electrolysis. The resulting hydrogen is an energy carrier that can power a car by reacting with oxygen from the air to create water, either through burning in a combustion engine or catalyzed to produce electricity in a fuel cell.

  4. Fuel cell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fuel_cell

    A fuel cell system running on hydrogen can be compact and lightweight, and have no major moving parts. Because fuel cells have no moving parts and do not involve combustion, in ideal conditions they can achieve up to 99.9999% reliability. [83] This equates to less than one minute of downtime in a six-year period. [83]

  5. Electrolysis of water - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electrolysis_of_water

    PEM fuel cells use a solid polymer membrane (a thin plastic film) which is permeable to hydrogen ions when it is saturated with water, but does not conduct electrons. It uses a proton-exchange membrane, or polymer-electrolyte membrane (PEM), which is a semipermeable membrane generally made from ionomers and designed to conduct protons while ...

  6. Molten-salt reactor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Molten-salt_reactor

    The fuel salt takes approximately 3 to 4 seconds to complete a full cycle. At any given time during operation, half of the total fuel salt volume is in the core and the rest is in the external fuel circuit (salt collectors, salt-bubble separators, fuel heat exchangers, pumps, salt injectors and pipes). [28]

  7. Salt water chlorination - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salt_water_chlorination

    Salt water chlorination is a process that uses dissolved salt (1000–4000 ppm or 1–4 g/L) for the chlorination of swimming pools and hot tubs.The chlorine generator (also known as salt cell, salt generator, salt chlorinator, or SWG) uses electrolysis in the presence of dissolved salt to produce chlorine gas or its dissolved forms, hypochlorous acid and sodium hypochlorite, which are already ...

  8. Water-activated battery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water-activated_battery

    Another water-activated battery had been invented by Susumu Suzuki of Total System Conductor. Aluminium anodes are used on many water-activated batteries designed for use with salt water such as seawater. The HydroPak uses water-activated disposable fuel cartridges as an alternative to lead acid battery packs and portable generators.

  9. Electrochemical cell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electrochemical_cell

    A fuel cell is an electrochemical cell that reacts hydrogen fuel with oxygen or another oxidizing agent, to convert chemical energy to electricity. Fuel cells are different from batteries in requiring a continuous source of fuel and oxygen (usually from air) to sustain the chemical reaction, whereas in a battery the chemical energy comes from ...