JustLiveGreener on Facebook

Your Guide To A Greener Lifestyle

Your Guide To A Greener Lifestyle

Who's Online

0 users and 50 guests online | Show All

Green Challenge


You've probably noticed how much plastic surrounds our daily food: packaging, disposable plates, cups and utensils, lunch boxes, bags… it doesn’t need to be so. Our challenge is simple, but perhaps not that easy: make your next lunch out plastic-free.

Read more...

Did You Know?

The Swiss-pioneered water-disinfection method SODIS is an incredibly simple, fast and effective way of turning contaminated water into safe, potable water. How? By simply leaving a clear PET plastic bottle filled with infected water onto a piece of metal out in the sun for 6 hours, enough time for UVA radiation to kill all bacteria, viruses and parasites. It’s helped countries like Tanzania and Kenya make its contaminated tap water safe, and school absenteeism due to diarrhea drop.


Source: The National Geographic

Popular Articles



Search JustLiveGreener


JustLiveGreener Members

Recommended Products

<

Featured On




Green Blogs - BlogCatalog Blog Directory

Best Green Blogs
Hydrogen Fuel Cells E-mail
Monday, 04 May 2009 21:04

A hydrogen fuel cell is a device that turns the chemical energy in a fuel directly into electricity.

The waste product is water. A single cell consists of a sandwich of two metallic plates with a plastic membrane between them. Hydrogen-rich fuel (derived from gasoline, natural gas, propane, or methanol) is fed to one side of the cell, where it combines with atmospheric oxygen to produce electricity and water. Numerous cells are packed together into a "stack" that can generate enough voltage to power a vehicle or some other electric device. Hydrogen fuel cell vehicles are more efficient than conventional internal combustion engine vehicles and produce no harmful tailpipe exhaust. However, extremely high manufacturing costs, fuel-supply problems, fuel storage problems, limited mileage ability, and cold-temperature sensitivity mean that a mass-market fuel cell vehicle probably won't be available for at least 10–20 years—perhaps much longer.
Source

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/teachers/activities/3507_car.html

 
 
Joomla 1.5 Templates by Joomlashack