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Lesson 18.4 Energy From Hydrogen

Lesson 18.4 Energy From Hydrogen. Hydrogen is the most abundant element in the universe. Rockets, such as those that powered the space shuttle, have been powered by hydrogen fuel. Hydrogen- A Future Fuel Source?. Hydrogen is the most abundant element in the universe

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Lesson 18.4 Energy From Hydrogen

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  1. Lesson 18.4 Energy From Hydrogen Hydrogen is the most abundant element in the universe. Rockets, such as those that powered the space shuttle, havebeen powered by hydrogen fuel.

  2. Hydrogen- A Future Fuel Source? • Hydrogen is the most abundant element in the universe • Burning it would cause no air pollution produce water vapor. • How do we get the hydrogen gas? a) by using electricity to split molecules of water. b) grow plants (algae) to produce hydrogen

  3. H2 gas can be combusted to produce heat, with just water as a byproduct. On Earth, H2 is commonly found in compounds such as water, though it is rare in its elemental form, H2 gas. H2 can be produced by breaking down water (H2O) or methane (CH4). A new technology involves using green algae to produce H2 from water. Hydrogen (H2) as a Fuel Source Algae used to produce hydrogen gas

  4. Hydrogen Powered Car Debuted at the car show by Honda in 2008

  5. Hyundai Tucson Hydrogen Fuel Cell Electric Vehicle 2015 VIDEO

  6. Fuel Cells H2 and O2 react to form water, producing electricity in the fuel cell’s electrodes. Only byproducts are water vapor and heat. Can power vehicles or power plants Can provide electricity to places “off-grid” or unreachable by conventional power companies Fuel Cell

  7. Why Not Now? • It takes a lot of energy to produce hydrogen gas. • Expensive. • However if solar cells or wind power is used to generate the electricity to produce the H2, the H2 can be stored in tanks and pipelined to places it is needed.

  8. Benefits and Costs of Hydrogen as a Fuel Source Benefits: Inexhaustible supply of hydrogen Few greenhouse gases or pollutants Water and heat might be the only byproducts. Can be stored and transported Costs: Hydrolysis (splitting of water to generate H2) is expensive, and breaking down methane yields carbon dioxide. Both require energy from an outside source. H2 gas must be compressed if used for vehicle fuel.

  9. Hybrids & Co-Generation Hybrids- efficient vehicles using gasoline and an electric motor. a. Gasoline engine shuts off when stopped, then electric one kicks in b. Aerodynamic & Lightweight Website 2013 Ford Escape Hybrid

  10. The world in 2050 • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XeEYaX82jSE

  11. Watch the following videos and answer the discussion question http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/tech/fuel- cells.html http://video.nationalgeographic.com/video/fuel-cells

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