water splitting

A Clean Energy Harvest Using Two of the Most Abundant Materials on Earth

‘This unassisted water splitting, which is very rare, does not require expensive or scarce resources.’

Stanford scientists develop water splitter that runs on ordinary AAA battery

Hongjie Dai and colleagues have developed a cheap, emissions-free device that uses a 1.5-volt battery

An improved, cost-effective catalyst for water-splitting devices

  Solar energy appears to be the only form of renewable that can be exploited

Stanford scientists create a durable, low-cost water splitter made of silicon and nickel

Stanford researchers have developed an inexpensive device that uses light to split water into oxygen

Producing hydrogen from water with carbon/charcoal powder

The experiment generated hydrogen at room temperature without the need for costly catalysts or electrodes

CU-Boulder team develops new water splitting technique that could produce hydrogen fuel

A University of Colorado Boulder team has developed a radically new technique that uses the