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More solid than solid: A potential hydrogen-storage compound
April 03, 2008
One of the key engineering challenges to building a clean, efficient, hydrogen-powered car is how to design the fuel tank. Storing enough raw hydrogen for a reasonable driving range would require either impractically high pressures for gaseous hydrogen or extremely low temperatures for liquid hydrogen. In a new paper* researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology's Center for Neutron Research (NCNR) have demonstrated that a novel class of materials could enable a practical hydrogen fuel tank. A research team from NIST, the University of Maryland and the California Institute of Technology studied metal-organic frameworks (MOFs). One of several classes of materials that can bind and release hydrogen under the right conditions, they have some distinct advantages over competitors. In principle they could be engineered so that refueling is as easy as pumping gas at a service station is today, and MOFs don't require the high temperatures (110 to 500 C) some other materials need to release hydrogen. In particular, the team examined MOF-74, a porous crystalline powder developed at the University of California at Los Angeles. MOF-74 resembles a series of tightly packed straws comprised of mostly carbon atoms with columns of zinc ions running down the inside walls. A gram of the stuff has about the same surface area as two basketball courts. The researchers used neutron scattering and gas adsorption techniques to determine that at 77 K (-196 C), MOF-74 can adsorb more hydrogen than any unpressurized framework structure studied to date-packing the molecules in more densely than they would be if frozen in a block. NCNR scientist Craig Brown says that, though his team doesn't understand exactly what allows the hydrogen to bond in this fashion, they think the zinc center has some interesting properties. "When we started doing experiments, we realized the metal interaction doesn't just increase the temperature at which hydrogen can be stored, but it also increases the density above that in solid hydrogen," Brown says. "This is absolutely the first time this has been encountered without having to use pressure." Although the liquid-nitrogen temperature of MOF-74 is not exactly temperate, it's easier to reach than the temperature of solid hydrogen (-269 C), and one of the goals of this research is to achieve energy densities great enough to be as economical as gasoline at ambient, and thus less costly, temperatures. MOF-74 is a step forward in terms of understanding energy density, but there are other factors left to be dealt with that, once addressed, could further increase the temperature at which the fuel can be stored. Fully understanding the physics of the interaction might allow scientists to develop means for removing refrigeration or insulation, both of which are costly in terms of fuel economy, fuel production, or both. ### The work was funded in part through the Department of Energy's Hydrogen Sorption Center of Excellence. * Y. Liu, H. Kabbour, C.M. Brown, D.A. Neumann and C.C. Ahn. Increasing the density of adsorbed hydrogen with coordinatively unsaturated metal centers in metal-organic frameworks. Langmuir, ASAP Article 10.1021/la703864a. Published March 27, 2008. National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)

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Hydrogen: The Essential Element
by John S. Rigden (Author)
Seduced by simplicity, physicists find themselves endlessly fascinated by hydrogen, the simplest of atoms. Hydrogen has shocked, it has surprised, it has embarrassed, it has humbled--and again and again it has guided physicists to the edge of new vistas where the promise of basic understanding and momentous insights beckoned. The allure of hydrogen, crucial to life and critical to scientific discovery, is at the center of this book, which tells a story that begins with the big bang and continues to unfold today. In this biography of hydrogen, John Rigden shows how this singular atom, the most abundant in the universe, has helped unify our understanding of the material world from the smallest scale, the elementary particles, to the largest, the universe itself. It is a tale of...
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How to Build Solar Hydrogen Generator (How to Kill your Debt with Free Renewable Energy, Fuels & Self-Sustainability)
The problem with converting water into hydrogen and oxygen through electrolysis is that often you almost put in as much electricity, fuel or energy into splitting the molecules as the stored energy you get back. By letting a solar panel do the work for you, not only will you never pay for fuel again, but you’re running your car by the Sun and Water!
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100% Hydrogen Conversion for Autos/Trucks/SUVs
In the summer of 2010 Frederick W. Wood & David Seigler, from Future Energy Concepts, Inc. released a video on YouTube which caused a viral stir on the internet. Their 14:30 minute video showed a 2004 Dodge truck that was modified with NEW high output Hydrogen Generator (HHO). They turned off the gas fuel system and ran the truck ONLY on H20 (water)! They explained how the system worked in detailed, as they drove it around the block. They announced the truck just completed a 3000 mile trip and used about 12 gallons of H20. Fred W. Wood also said this vital information was available to the public as OPEN SOURCE technology for all to use. This is the INFORMATION!
(also available in paperback on Amazon.com)
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Hydrogen Fuel: Production, Transport, and Storage
by Ram B. Gupta (Editor)
From Methane to Hydrogen—Making the Switch to a Cleaner Fuel Source The world’s overdependence on fossil fuels has created environmental problems, such as air pollution and global warming, as well as political and economic unrest. With water as its only by-product and its availability in all parts of the world, hydrogen promises to be the next great fuel source. All of the Key Aspects of Hydrogen Fuel Hydrogen Fuel: Production, Transport, and Storage describes various aspects of hydrogen fuel, including production from both renewable and nonrenewable sources, purification, storage, transport, safety, codes, and carbon dioxide sequestration. The book examines the unique properties and uses of the hydrogen molecule, its ability to be produced from numerous energy sources, and its...
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HYDROGEN - Hot Stuff Cool Science 2nd edition: Discover the Future of Energy
by Rex A. Ewing (Author)
Discover the solid science and cutting-edge technologies behind hydrogen energy and fuel cells, and learn how we will use this energy in our homes and buildings, vehicles and public transportation, for electricity in remote areas and for backup power, and much more. Zed, the wise wizard of the Wasserstoff Farm, leads readers through chapters that include an overview of basic chemistry and energy transformation; a look at global warming and the annual U.S. energy consumption; electrolysis and other ways of extracting hydrogen from water; extracting hydrogen from coal, natural gas and biomass; ethanol and methanol production; nuclear energy and hydrogen production; using wind and solar energy for hydrogen production; hydrogen storage; internal combustion engines fueled by hydrogen; and fuel...
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How to Make Hydrogen (The Secret Oil Companies Don't Want You to Know)
Feeling pain at the pump? Considering alternatives to oil? This guide explain how you can create an endless supply of fuel right from your home. Give it a try!
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Hydrogen Age, The: Empowering a Clean-Energy Future
by Geoffrey Holland (Author), James Provenzano (Author)
Hydrogen stands out as the best alternative to traditional polluting fossil fuels for many reasons-it can be produced without pollution, is nontoxic and noncorrosive, and we can never run out of it. It is as safe as or safer than the fuels we currently use and can be made virtually anywhere. The Hydrogen Age explains this promising fuel, shows how it can be harnessed to serve virtually all of our energy needs, and reveals why hydrogen is destined to become the clean, safe, renewable fuel of choice for the future. For more information, visit www.theh2age.com.
(20071001)
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Hydrogen Peroxide: Medical Miracle
by William Campbell Douglass II (Author)
Peroxides are supposed to be bad for you. Free radicals and all that. But now we hear that hydrogen peroxide is good for us. Hydrogen peroxide will put extra oxygen in your blood. There's no doubt about that. Hydrogen peroxide costs pennies. So if you can get oxygen into the blood cheaply and safely, maybe cancer (which doesn't like oxygen), emphysema, AIDS, and many other terrible diseases can be treated effectively. Intravenous hydrogen peroxide rapidly relieves allergic reactions, influenza symptoms, and acute viral infections. No one expects to live forever. But we would all like to have a George Burns finish. The prospect of finishing life in a nursing home after abandoning your tricycle in the mobile home park is not appealing. Then comes the loss of control of vital functions the...
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How to Run your Car on Water (How to Kill your Debt with Free Renewable Energy, Fuels & Self-Sustainability)
Never pay for fuel again! Either run on straight water (HHO) of just offset your current gas mileage with hydrogen. By dumping hydrogen from this generator right into your air intake, your computer will regulate and restrict the amount of gasoline the engine burns, giving you up to 60-80mpg.
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Fuel from Water: Energy Independence with Hydrogen
by Michael A. Peavey (Author)
The book advocates hydrogen fuel as the best long-term alternative to fossil fuels and as a way to stop polluting the air and subsidizing terrorists. Shows how to generate hydrogen by electrolysis, how to convert an internal combustion engine to hydrogen, and how hydrogen can be used in home appliances.
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