Results 211 to 220 of about 51,688 (302)

A Biofuel Cell for Electricity Generation from Biomass-Derived Cellobiose. [PDF]

open access: yesBiosensors (Basel)
Pinyou P   +7 more
europepmc   +1 more source

2D Nanomaterials for Solar Hydrogen Production

open access: yesAdvanced Energy and Sustainability Research, EarlyView.
This review gives comprehensively summarized latest advances on solar H2 production by various 2D nanomaterials using photocatalytic and photoelectrocatalytic H2 production methods, especially highlighting the photocatalytic one. After the summary, an outlook into the challenges and the future of 2D nanomaterials for solar H2 production is given.
Pengfei Cheng   +5 more
wiley   +1 more source

The Future of Hydrogen‐Powered Aviation: Technologies, Challenges, and a Strategic Roadmap for Sustainable Decarbonization

open access: yesAdvanced Energy and Sustainability Research, EarlyView.
Hydrogen‐powered aviation offers a transformative pathway to zero‐emission flight by eliminating in‐flight CO2 emissions. Key considerations include propulsion systems (fuel cells and hydrogen combustion), cryogenic storage and insulation challenges, infrastructure and cost barriers, and supply‐chain constraints.
Mubasshira   +4 more
wiley   +1 more source

Strategies for Paired Electrolysis with Enhanced Efficiency

open access: yesAdvanced Energy and Sustainability Research, EarlyView.
This review summarizes the fundamentals, challenges, and strategies for paired electrolysis, with examples in the chlor‐alkali, hydrogen production, CO2 reduction, and ammonia synthesis industries. Future directions include the development of advanced membranes, computational studies, process integration, scale‐up, and techno‐economic analysis.
Yuanyuan Yao   +6 more
wiley   +1 more source

Rethinking Power Solutions for Healthcare Wearables: From Point‐of‐Care and Episodic use to Continuous Monitoring and Therapeutic Platforms

open access: yesAdvanced Energy and Sustainability Research, EarlyView.
This Perspective examines practical power solutions for wearable healthcare systems, highlighting the limits of standard batteries. It categorizes wearables into four domains—point‐of‐care diagnostics, episodic monitoring, continuous long‐term monitoring, and therapeutic platforms—and analyzes their power needs.
Seokheun Choi
wiley   +1 more source

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