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Scientists develop cheaper ‘green fuel’

Cheaper green fuel has been developed by scientists in the United Kingdom – using iron instead of costly platinum.

The breakthrough brings the commercialization of hydrogen cell electric vehicles a step closer.

They are an environmentally-friendly alternative for portable power – with water vapor the only by-product.

The development puts the common metal ahead in the race to find cost-effective catalysts.

Project leader Professor Anthony Kucernak, of Imperial College London, said: “Currently, around 60 percent of the cost of a single fuel cell is the platinum for the catalyst.

“To make fuel cells a real viable alternative to fossil-fuel-powered vehicles, for example, we need to bring that cost down.”

“Our cheaper catalyst design should make this a reality, and allow deployment of significantly more renewable energy systems that use hydrogen as fuel, ultimately reducing greenhouse gas emissions and putting the world on a path to net-zero emissions.”

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4 thoughts on “Scientists develop cheaper ‘green fuel’”

  1. Hydrogen is the most abundant element in the world.
    Free hydrogen for fuel is extremely costly, very hard to contain, and takes a lot of energy to make.

    NOT A VIABLE SOLUTION!

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