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    Hydrogen and Gold
    Posted on Thursday, February 17, 2005 @ 22:24:56 GMT by vlad

    Science Clemson research could help turn hydrogen hype into 'hy'ways - February 17, 2005

    Americans will have a hard time driving on the future's highways if they don't have fuel. While hydrogen is the most abundant element in the universe, it's not readily available. Many researchers are working to develop fuel cells for the proposed alternative to petroleum-based fuels, but few are addressing the issue of where that hydrogen will come from.

    The U.S. Department of Energy has awarded Clemson University a three-year, $856,000 grant to develop more efficient methods for producing hydrogen.

    "The irony is that today, most hydrogen is produced by consuming the very fossil fuels we're trying to replace," said principal investigator Mark Thies, professor of chemical engineering at Clemson. "But, we can also produce hydrogen by splitting water into its two elements, hydrogen and oxygen. The trick is to find the most energy-efficient manner for carrying out that splitting process."

    Thies explains that proposed "thermochemical processes" are much more efficient than the classic electrolysis method, which uses an electric current, for splitting water. The thermochemical processes require heat -- both solar and nuclear power have been proposed -- to operate and use complex chemical reactions to reduce the energy required to split the water.

    These processes are still on the drawing board. Both high-powered experiments and high-powered computer calculations will be needed before hydrogen production can become a reality. Thies has assembled a diverse team of experimentalists, theoreticians and computer-aided design specialists to work on this challenging problem. The team includes Clemson professor David Bruce, John O'Connell of the University of Virginia, industrial consultant Paul Mathias of Cambridge, Mass., and Maximilian Gorensek of the Savannah River National Laboratory.

    Source: http://www.physorg.com/news3083.html

    SMALL IS DIFFERENT, February 17

    Years ago, when Uzi Landman and his colleagues set out to uncover some of the rules that govern why a non-reactive metal like gold acts as a catalyst when it is in nanoclusters only a few atoms in size, they didn't sit down in a lab with the precious metal. Instead, they ran computer simulations and discovered that gold is a very effective catalyst when it is in clusters of eight to two dozen atoms. They also found that electrical charging of gold is crucial to its catalytic capabilities. Six years later, the team has verified their earlier predictions experimentally, and they stand ready to further explore environmental effects on catalysis.

    Full story at http://www.physorg.com/news3087.html


     
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    "Hydrogen and Gold" | Login/Create an Account | 5 comments | Search Discussion
    The comments are owned by the poster. We aren't responsible for their content.

    No Comments Allowed for Anonymous, please register

    Re: Hydrogen and Gold (Score: 1)
    by malc on Friday, February 18, 2005 @ 00:24:07 GMT
    (User Info | Send a Message) http://web.ukonline.co.uk/mripley
    Nuclear to generate hydrogen ! Why ? Surely it is not beyond the ingenuity of scientists to use large areas of desert covered with solar panels to convert water (pumped in ) to hydrogen tanks or whatever storage medium is safest ?

    Does anyone know what it would take (equipment cost, size etc) to have a complete solar powered hydrogen generating system capable of supporting one family car.



    Re: Hydrogen and Gold (Score: 1)
    by ElectroDynaCat on Friday, February 18, 2005 @ 07:44:30 GMT
    (User Info | Send a Message)
    One way to really stick it to Big Oil can be accomplished with present technology. A conventional hydrogen storage cylinder can hold enough hydrogen to run an automobile for about 30 miles. Why not adapt an engine to burn both hydrogen and gasoline. Since the average car is only driven about 20 miles a day, one could burn environmentally produced hydrogen from wind or solar, and when the hydrogen ran out, switch over to gas. This could dramatically cut the amount of imported oil consumed and greenhouse gas emissions. Or is this too simple?



    Re: Hydrogen and Gold (Score: 1)
    by aironoeus on Monday, February 21, 2005 @ 07:24:36 GMT
    (User Info | Send a Message)
    Man....This friggin report doesn't know everything. Alternate Energy Corp has a damn alloy that will absorb almost all of the oxygen off of the water molecules so you end up with 99.99% pure hydrogen (they say it makes 99.99% hydrogen without any power input so that has to be what it's doing). They'll be coming out soon. So just take this Johnny come lately article and through it in the trash.



     

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