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     129  0 Kommentare NewHydrogen CEO Steve Hill Discussed Use of Hydrogen for Aviation with University of Tennessee Expert - Seite 2

    Dr. Paul Palies is Associate Professor at The University of Tennessee Space Institute where he established the Combustion and Propulsion for Aviation Research Center, his research group. He graduated from University of Paris XI (now University of Saclay) with a license and maîtres and from Ecole Centrale Paris with a Master and Doctorate in 2010. He served or has served on technical committees on mechanics (U.S. National Committee on Theoretical and Applied Mechanics, and combustion and propulsion (American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, The Association of Aeronautics and Astronautics of France, and The American Society of Mechanical Engineers). He has authored a series of pioneering articles on premixed and hydrogen combustion and a book published by Academic Press where he described technical elements for a future thermal-powered based clean aviation.

    Dr. Palies is listed as a Google Scholar at https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=GaOIYg8AAAAJ

    Watch the full discussion on the NewHydrogen Podcast featuring Dr. Palies at https://newhydrogen.com/videos/ceo-podcast/dr-paul-palies-university-o ....

    For more information about NewHydrogen, please visit https://newhydrogen.com/.

    About NewHydrogen, Inc.

    NewHydrogen is developing ThermoLoop, a breakthrough technology that uses water and heat rather than electricity to produce the world’s cheapest green hydrogen. Hydrogen is the cleanest and most abundant element in the universe, and we can’t live without it. Hydrogen is the key ingredient in making fertilizers needed to grow food for the world. It is also used for transportation, refining oil and making steel, glass, pharmaceuticals and more. Nearly all the hydrogen today is made from hydrocarbons like coal, oil, and natural gas, which are dirty and limited resources. Water, on the other hand, is an infinite and renewable worldwide resource.

    Currently, the most common method of making green hydrogen is to split water into oxygen and hydrogen with an electrolyzer using green electricity produced from solar or wind. However, green electricity is and always will be very expensive. It currently accounts for 73% of the cost of green hydrogen. By using heat directly, we can skip the expensive process of making electricity, and fundamentally lower the cost of green hydrogen. Inexpensive heat can be obtained from concentrated solar, geothermal, nuclear reactors and industrial waste heat for use in our novel low-cost thermochemical water splitting process. Working with a world class research team at UC Santa Barbara, our goal is to help usher in the green hydrogen economy that Goldman Sachs estimated to have a future market value of $12 trillion.

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    NewHydrogen CEO Steve Hill Discussed Use of Hydrogen for Aviation with University of Tennessee Expert - Seite 2 Dr. Paul Palies described a clean combustion system that doesn’t add nitrogen oxide and eliminates carbon SANTA CLARITA, Calif., April 09, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) - NewHydrogen, Inc. (OTCMKTS:NEWH), the developer of ThermoLoop, a breakthrough …