Hydrogen Stocks List

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

Hydrogen Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
May 15 FMC Up 30%, FMC Remains One Of My Favorite Deep-Value Plays
May 15 PLUG Plug Power Unveils Advanced Hydrogen-Powered Truck, Stock Shoots Higher, But Technicals Reveal Mixed Signals
May 15 WLK Westlake Pipe & Fittings Expands Operations with New Distribution Center in Florida
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
May 14 PLUG Plug Power: Consider Selling The Rally
May 14 PLUG Wall Street Trades Flat On Mixed Producer Inflation; Meme Stocks See Wild Ride, Bitcoin Drops: What's Driving Markets Tuesday?
May 14 PLUG Why FuelCell Energy, Bloom, and Clean Energy Fuels Rose Today
May 14 PLUG Meme Stocks, Tariffs, Inflation Data Trigger Some Volatile Trade: Rent The Runway, Plug Power, Rivian
May 14 PLUG Sector Update: Energy Stocks Slipping Tuesday Afternoon
May 14 NKLA Nikola Stock Jumped Again Today. Buy, Sell, or Hold?
May 14 PLUG This New Energy Stock Is Up 40% After The U.S. Government Throws It A Lifeline
May 14 NKLA Why These Former Meme-Stock EV Companies Are Surging Now
May 14 PLUG Is Plug Power Stock Going to $5? 1 Wall Street Analyst Thinks So.
Hydrogen

Hydrogen is the chemical element with the symbol H and atomic number 1. With a standard atomic weight of 1.008, hydrogen is the lightest element in the periodic table. Hydrogen is the most abundant chemical substance in the universe, constituting roughly 75% of all baryonic mass. Non-remnant stars are mainly composed of hydrogen in the plasma state. The most common isotope of hydrogen, termed protium (name rarely used, symbol 1H), has one proton and no neutrons.
The universal emergence of atomic hydrogen first occurred during the recombination epoch (Big Bang). At standard temperature and pressure, hydrogen is a colorless, odorless, tasteless, non-toxic, nonmetallic, highly combustible diatomic gas with the molecular formula H2. Since hydrogen readily forms covalent compounds with most nonmetallic elements, most of the hydrogen on Earth exists in molecular forms such as water or organic compounds. Hydrogen plays a particularly important role in acid–base reactions because most acid-base reactions involve the exchange of protons between soluble molecules. In ionic compounds, hydrogen can take the form of a negative charge (i.e., anion) when it is known as a hydride, or as a positively charged (i.e., cation) species denoted by the symbol H+. The hydrogen cation is written as though composed of a bare proton, but in reality, hydrogen cations in ionic compounds are always more complex. As the only neutral atom for which the Schrödinger equation can be solved analytically, study of the energetics and bonding of the hydrogen atom has played a key role in the development of quantum mechanics.
Hydrogen gas was first artificially produced in the early 16th century by the reaction of acids on metals. In 1766–81, Henry Cavendish was the first to recognize that hydrogen gas was a discrete substance, and that it produces water when burned, the property for which it was later named: in Greek, hydrogen means "water-former".
Industrial production is mainly from steam reforming natural gas, and less often from more energy-intensive methods such as the electrolysis of water. Most hydrogen is used near the site of its production, the two largest uses being fossil fuel processing (e.g., hydrocracking) and ammonia production, mostly for the fertilizer market. Hydrogen is problematic in metallurgy because it can embrittle many metals, complicating the design of pipelines and storage tanks.

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