Today’s Solutions: January 15, 2025

Hydrogen is often considered a fuel for the future, in the form of fuel cells to power electric motors or burned in internal combustion engines. But finding a practical, inexpensive and nontoxic way to produce large amounts of hydrogen gas – especially by splitting water into its component parts, hydrogen and oxygen – has been a challenge. A team of researchers from the University of Houston and the California Institute of Technology has reported a…

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