Fuel Cell Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Fuel Cell stocks.

Fuel Cell Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
May 20 HTGC Honeywell, Prudential Financial, Hercules Capital And A Major Tech Stock On CNBC's 'Final Trades'
May 20 BLDP Ballard launches 9th generation high-performance fuel cell engine for heavy-duty vehicles at ACT Expo 2024
May 20 PLUG Great News for Plug Power Stock Investors
May 20 PLUG DOE Announces Support for Plug Power Hydrogen Production Sites
May 18 PLUG Plug Power rises to top industrial gainer of week, while IES Holdings dips
May 18 PLUG If You'd Invested $500 in Plug Power Stock 5 Years Ago, Here's How Much You'd Have Today
May 18 HYZN Tesla Sweats Over Approval Of Elon Musk's Pay Plan, Ford's Distress Call To Suppliers, Faraday Future's Mouthwatering Rally And More: Biggest EV Stories Of The Week
May 18 PLUG Plug Power Stock: What to Know Before You Buy or Sell
May 18 PLUG Plug Power Continues to Burn Cash, but There Are Signs of a Turnaround After DOE Loan Commitment. Time to Buy the Stock?
May 17 PLUG Why Hydrogen Stocks Skyrocketed Higher This Week
May 16 PLUG Plug Signs 3 GW BEDP Contract with Allied Green Ammonia for Electrolyzer Project in Australia
May 15 PLUG Plug Power Unveils Advanced Hydrogen-Powered Truck, Stock Shoots Higher, But Technicals Reveal Mixed Signals
May 15 PLUG Plug Power: Conditional DOE Loan Guarantee Meets Meme Stock Frenzy - Hold
May 15 PLUG Plug to Revolutionize Middle-Mile Delivery with Class 6 Fuel Cell Electric Truck Integration
May 15 PLUG DOE awards $1.7B conditional loan guarantee to Plug Power to build 6 clean hydrogen factories
May 15 PLUG Is Plug Power Stock a Buy After Cratering 75%?
May 15 PLUG Plug Power Secures $1.66B Conditional Loan Guarantee from DOE
May 15 PLUG GameStop, AMC, Plug Power, Rumble, Tesla: Why These 5 Stocks Are Investors' Radars Today
May 14 PLUG The $1.7 Billion News That Sent Plug Power Stock Surging: Here's What You Need to Know Before Buying
May 14 PLUG UPDATE 1-US offers conditional $1.66 billion loan to hydrogen producer Plug Power
Fuel Cell

A fuel cell is an electrochemical cell that converts the potential energy from a fuel into electricity through an electrochemical reaction of hydrogen fuel with oxygen or another oxidizing agent. Fuel cells are different from batteries in requiring a continuous source of fuel and oxygen (usually from air) to sustain the chemical reaction, whereas in a battery the chemical energy comes from chemicals already present in the battery. Fuel cells can produce electricity continuously for as long as fuel and oxygen are supplied.
The first fuel cells were invented in 1838. The first commercial use of fuel cells came more than a century later in NASA space programs to generate power for satellites and space capsules. Since then, fuel cells have been used in many other applications. Fuel cells are used for primary and backup power for commercial, industrial and residential buildings and in remote or inaccessible areas. They are also used to power fuel cell vehicles, including forklifts, automobiles, buses, boats, motorcycles and submarines.
There are many types of fuel cells, but they all consist of an anode, a cathode, and an electrolyte that allows positively charged hydrogen ions (protons) to move between the two sides of the fuel cell. At the anode a catalyst causes the fuel to undergo oxidation reactions that generate protons (positively charged hydrogen ions) and electrons. The protons flow from the anode to the cathode through the electrolyte after the reaction. At the same time, electrons are drawn from the anode to the cathode through an external circuit, producing direct current electricity. At the cathode, another catalyst causes hydrogen ions, electrons, and oxygen to react, forming water. Fuel cells are classified by the type of electrolyte they use and by the difference in startup time ranging from 1 second for proton exchange membrane fuel cells (PEM fuel cells, or PEMFC) to 10 minutes for solid oxide fuel cells (SOFC). A related technology is flow batteries, in which the fuel can be regenerated by recharging. Individual fuel cells produce relatively small electrical potentials, about 0.7 volts, so cells are "stacked", or placed in series, to create sufficient voltage to meet an application's requirements. In addition to electricity, fuel cells produce water, heat and, depending on the fuel source, very small amounts of nitrogen dioxide and other emissions. The energy efficiency of a fuel cell is generally between 40–60%; however, if waste heat is captured in a cogeneration scheme, efficiencies up to 85% can be obtained.
The fuel cell market is growing, and in 2013 Pike Research estimated that the stationary fuel cell market will reach 50 GW by 2020.

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