Fuel
Cell Vehicle Research
Research of fuel cells are revealing new technologies that
have real promise for the ôgreenö movement that is taking place
when it come to fueling our cars with alternative fuels. Fuel
cells are mechanical devices that use hydrogen or
hydrogen-containing fuel such as methane to produce an electric
current. Fuel cells are clean, quiet, and highly efficient
sources of electricity. Scientists are doing extensive research
on how new, smaller fuel cells can benefit the alternative fuel
industry, and their research is very promising.
Read our review of the best Water Fuel Cell Conversion Kits
Here.
In 2003, President Bush announced a program called the
Hydrogen Fuel Initiative (HFI) during his State of the Union
Address. This initiative, supported by legislation in the
Energy Policy Act of 2005 (EPACT 2005) and the Advanced Energy
Initiative of 2006, aims to develop hydrogen, fuel cell and
infrastructure technologies to make fuel-cell vehicles
practical and cost-effective by 2020. The United States has
dedicated more than one billion dollars to fuel cell research
and development so far.
A battery has all of its chemicals stored inside, and it
converts those chemicals into electricity too. This means that
a battery eventually "goes dead" and you either throw it away
or recharge it. With a fuel cell, chemicals constantly flow
into the cell so it never goes dead -- as long as there is a
flow of chemicals into the cell, the electricity flows out of
the cell. Most fuel cells in use today use hydrogen and oxygen
as the chemicals.
The fuel cell research that is being done today focuses on
making the fuel cells smaller and more efficient. As more and
more alternative fuel vehicles are being planned and produced,
making the energy source that powers them the best that they
can be. Early fuel cells were large and cumbersome, but
research technology has made them smaller and easily adaptable
into an alternative fuel vehicle.
Pollution reduction is one of the primary goals of the fuel
cell. By comparing a fuel-cell-powered car to a
gasoline-engine-powered car and a battery-powered car, you can
see how fuel cells might improve the efficiency of cars today.
ThatÆs why scientists have devoted much of their research time
towards making these tiny engines smaller and cleaner
burning.
The trend these days is toward reducing pollution and the
release of harmful greenhouse gases into the atmosphere. With
extensive fuel cell research, we are well on the way toward
converting our gasoline powered engines (gas guzzlers, if you
will) into clean burning vehicles that will run just like the
traditional car. But researching fuel cells needs funding. ItÆs
a good thing the government has agreed!
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