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Fuel Cells

A fuel cell is an electrochemical device in which the energy of a chemical reaction is converted directly into electricity. To form electricity you need to combine H2 fuel with O2 air without combustion of any form. H2O and heat are the only by products when H2 is used as a fuel source.

Chemistry of a Fuel Cell

Anode Side (external supplies of fuel) 2H2 => 4H+ + 4e-

Cathode Side (oxidant) O2 + 4H+ +4e- => 2H2O

Net Reaction 2H2 + O2 => 2H2O


History of the Fuel Cell

The fuel cell was invented by Sir William Grove in 1839. The fuel cell he made is similar materials to todays phosphoric-acid fuel cell. In the 1960's, the first application was used in the Gemini and Apollo space programs. Then in the 1970's, a fuel cell was developed to be used on Earth. It eventually was tested to be used with utilities and automobiles in the 1980's.


Types of Fuel Cells

  1. Alkaline fuel cells- used by NASA in the Apollo and space shuttle programs, used to power electrical systems on spacecraft, used
  2. Phosphoric acid fuel cells- used for stationary power applications, used in hotels, and hospitals in the U.S., Japan, and Europe.
  3. Molten carbohydrate fuel cells- operate at high temperatures to use fuel directly, built in the U.S. and Japan.
  4. Solid oxide fuel cells- operate at extremely high temperatures allowing them to tolerate impure fuels, have a simple design.
  5. Proton exchange membrane (PEM)- use a thin plastic film as an electrolyte, produce a powerful electric current relative to their size, deliver higher power density resulting in reduced weight and improved cost and volume performance.


Applications for Fuel Cells

*Automobiles
*Portable Power
*Buses
*Home Power Generation
*Large Power Generation
*Landfill Waste Treatment


  1. REDIRECT Hydrogen fuel cells
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