Aerospace and Mechanical Insider on MSN
BMW advances hydrogen fuel cell road testing in Europe
BMW Group has initiated European road trials of its hydrogen fuel cell vehicles, marking a significant step in evaluating the ...
Aerospace and Mechanical Insider on MSN
Volkswagen pursues breakthrough hydrogen fuel cell technology
Volkswagen is advancing a hydrogen fuel cell program that could significantly extend the range capabilities of zero-emission ...
Life requires energy. Energy is one of humanity’s most pressing concerns. Increasing energy demand, regional constraints, and the serious environmental consequences of traditional energy sources ...
This paper proposes a Feedback Linearization-based Adaptive Sliding Mode Controller (FLC-ASMC) to address the coordinated control of gas flow and pressure in the anode and cathode of automotive Proton ...
One of the most ambitious projects in the new frontier of electric aviation is the Flying Fuel Cell concept, a hydrogen-electric hybrid system being actively pursued by several European aerospace ...
The 10-bus pilot is part of the agency's efforts to transition to a climate-friendly fleet. But it has attracted criticism from some environmentalists. Employees with SEPTA and other transit agencies ...
What if the future of aviation didn’t rely on heavy lithium-ion batteries or complex hydrogen systems, but instead on a fuel as simple and abundant as sodium? At MIT, researchers are turning this bold ...
Engineers developed a fuel cell that offers more than three times as much energy per pound compared to lithium-ion batteries. Powered by a reaction between sodium metal and air, the device could be ...
Hydrogen fuel cells, which power some electric cars, pack far more energy per weight than lithium-ion batteries. The devices also show promise for decarbonizing aviation, shipping, and trucking. But ...
Fuel cells are not some novel new technology. In fact, most history books credit the invention of the fuel cell to Welsh chemist and physicist William Grove, who, in the late 1830s and early 1840s, ...
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