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 9 AVAV Cathie Wood's Ark Invest Purchases Over $30M of Shopify Shares Amid Q1 Numbers-Driven Plunge; Adds Reddit Shares To Kitty — Offloads Coinbase Stock As Bitcoin Declines
May 8 BE Fluence Energy, Inc. (FLNC) Reports Q2 Loss, Tops Revenue Estimates
May 8 BLDP Ballard Power Systems Inc. (NASDAQ:BLDP) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript
May 8 BLDP Ballard Power Systems: Strong Q1 Order Intake But Outlook Still Murky
May 8 HJEN Energy Shift: Shell Offloads Singapore Energy And Chemicals Park To Glencore-Chandra Asri Capital Joint Venture
May 7 BE Ameresco (AMRC) Reports Q1 Loss, Tops Revenue Estimates
May 7 BLDP Ballard Power Systems Inc. (BLDP) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript
May 7 AVAV This AI Play Nears Buy Point With A Little Pentagon Help
May 7 BLDP Compared to Estimates, Ballard (BLDP) Q1 Earnings: A Look at Key Metrics
May 7 BLDP Ballard Power Systems (BLDP) Reports Q1 Loss, Misses Revenue Estimates
May 7 BLDP Ballard Power Systems Q1 Loss Widens 27%, Revenue Advances 9%; Reiterates Outlook for 2024
May 7 AVAV AV’s Switchblade 600 Selected for Tranche 1 of the U.S. Department of Defense’s Replicator Initiative
May 7 BLDP Ballard Power Systems GAAP EPS of -$0.14 in-line, revenue of $14.5M misses by $3.08M
May 7 BLDP Ballard Reports Q1 2024 Results
May 7 HJEN Why BP Shares Are Trading Lower Premarket Today
May 6 BLDP Ballard Power Systems Q1 2024 Earnings Preview
May 6 AVAV Pentagon's Replicator selects AeroVironment's Switchblade-600 is first buy
May 3 BE 3 Hydrogen Stocks with the Potential to Make You an Overnight Millionaire
May 2 AVAV AeroVironment, Inc. to Present at the Bank of America Transportation, Airlines, and Industrials Conference
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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