Morning Overview on MSN
Solar system swaps O2 for sugar to cut green hydrogen costs
Green hydrogen has long been billed as a clean fuel for heavy industry, shipping, and long-duration storage, but its price ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Solar-powered system swaps oxygen for sugar to slash green hydrogen production costs
A new solar-electrolysis system uses a copper-doped catalyst to turn farm waste into hydrogen and valuable formate.
A research team from China Agricultural University and Nanyang Technological University reported in eScience that they have developed a copper-modified cobalt oxyhydroxide catalyst capable of ...
A recent review in Nature Reviews Clean Technology presents, for the first time, a pathway for scaling up decoupled water electrolysis (DWE) technologies to produce industrial-scale green hydrogen.
Scientists have developed a new technique that doubles the amount of hydrogen produced when splitting water molecules with electricity. The method works by adding a simple organic molecule and a ...
This study presents a highly efficient approach to solar hydrogen production by pairing water electrolysis with the selective oxidation of biomass-derived glucose. Central to this advance is a ...
Electrolysis is a method of removing individual hairs from the face or body. Today's medical electrolysis devices destroy the growth center of the hair with chemical or heat energy. After a very fine ...
Electrolysis is a key component of the cost of green hydrogen, and a Korean team says it's made a huge breakthrough with an anion exchange membrane that's not only cheaper than current proton exchange ...
Dominique Holder of Brooklyn, NY, tells POPSUGAR about her electrolysis experience. Before electrolysis, I was self-conscience, antisocial, depressed, and hated my facial hair that I was plagued with.
If you love your body hair—great! If you want to remove it, either temporarily with at-home laser devices, hair removal creams, or something more permanent—that’s great too. Personally, I chose to get ...
The aluminum radiator in my 1954 Chevy is only a few years old. I returned it to the manufacturer due to a number of leaks and was told the radiator was ruined by electrolysis and they would not stand ...
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