(Press-News.org) A team of USC scientists has developed a robust, efficient method of using hydrogen as a fuel source.
Hydrogen makes a great fuel because of it can easily be converted to electricity in a fuel cell and because it is carbon free. The downside of hydrogen is that, because it is a gas, it can only be stored in high pressure or cryogenic tanks.
In a vehicle with a tank full of hydrogen, "if you got into a wreck, you'd have a problem," said Travis Williams, assistant professor of chemistry at the USC Dornsife College.
A possible solution is to store hydrogen in a safe chemical form. Earlier this year, Williams and his team figured out a way to release hydrogen from an innocuous chemical material — a nitrogen-boron complex, ammonia borane — that can be stored as a stable solid.
Now the team has developed a catalyst system that releases enough hydrogen from its storage in ammonia borane to make it usable as a fuel source. Moreover, the system is air-stable and re-usable, unlike other systems for hydrogen storage on boron and metal hydrides.
The research was published this month in the Journal of the American Chemical Society.
"Ours is the first game in town for reusable, air stabile ammonia borane dehydrogenation," Williams said, adding that the USC Stevens Institute is in the process of patenting the system.
The system is sufficiently lightweight and efficient to have potential fuel applications ranging from motor-driven cycles to small aircraft, he said.
###
The research was funded by the Hydrocarbon Research Foundation and the National Science Foundation.
Breakthrough in hydrogen fuel cells
USC chemists develop way to safely store, extract hydrogen
2011-08-31
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Minnesota Child Support Basics
2011-08-31
When married couples with children divorce or obtain a legal separation, the court has the authority and an obligation to order child support. It is public policy in Minnesota that both parents shall be liable for the financial responsibilities of raising a child. As such, a support order is issued to compel a non-custodial parent to support the custodial parent in raising the child. The parent who is ordered to pay support is called the obligor. The parent who receives such support is called the obligee.
Child Support Generally
Under Minnesota law, child support ...
Calling nurses to exercise as role models for their patients
2011-08-31
Nurses, just like many of their patients, struggle to find time and motivation to exercise. But a new study may give these all-important caregivers some additional pressure and responsibility: nurses' attitudes can influence whether their patients commit to a healthy lifestyle.
"Nurses should model healthy exercise behavior," said Joyce Fitzpatrick, an author of the study in the International Journal of Nursing Practice and the Elizabeth Brooks Ford Professor of Nursing at the Frances Payne Bolton School of Nursing at Case Western Reserve University.
The study found, ...
Research identifies marketing mix strategy for pharmaceutical firms
2011-08-31
NEW YORK – August 30, 2011 – Research in Marketing Science by Professor Kamel Jedidi, John A. Howard Professor of Business, Marketing, Columbia Business School; Professor Oded Netzer, Philip H. Geier Jr. Associate Professor, Marketing, Columbia Business School; and Professor Ricardo Montoya, Department of Industrial Engineering, University of Chile, Santiago, Chile, reveals how pharmaceutical managers can maximize the return on marketing investments – by determining the physicians to target as well as when and how to target them. The researchers investigate the effectiveness ...
Hospitals Report an Average of One Medication Error per Patient per Day
2011-08-31
An estimated 7,000 deaths and 1.3 million injuries occur each year because of medication errors in America's hospitals. Research by the Institute of Medicine suggests that a typical hospital patient is subjected to an average of at least one medication error per day.
Common Types of Medication Errors
The most common type of error is the administration of an improper dose of medication, which accounts for 41 percent of all medication error deaths. Sixteen percent of medication errors are the result of hospital staff administering the wrong drug altogether, or of using ...
Patients’ health motivates workers to wash their hands
2011-08-31
Can changing a single word on a sign motivate doctors and nurses to wash their hands?
Campaigns about hand-washing in hospitals usually try to scare doctors and nurses about personal illness, says Adam Grant, a psychological scientist at The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania. "Most safety messages are about personal consequences," Grant says. "They tell you to wash your hands so you don't get sick." But his new study, which will be published in an upcoming issue of Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science, finds that this ...
Studies question effectiveness of sex offender laws
2011-08-31
Two studies in the latest issue of the Journal of Law and Economics cast doubt on whether sex offender registry and notification laws actually work as intended.
One study, by J.J. Prescott of the University of Michigan and Johan Rockoff of Columbia University, found that requiring sex offenders to register with police may significantly reduce the chances that they will re-offend. However the research also finds that making that same registry information available to the broader public may backfire, leading to higher overall rates of sex crime.
Meanwhile, another study ...
New Protocols to Avoid Wrong-Site Surgeries
2011-08-31
It seems inconceivable, but surgeons sometimes operate on the wrong side of a patient's body. It is a horrible mistake that should never happen, but unfortunately it does. Nearly 40 patients across the U.S. each week will come out of surgery and learn that doctors operated on the wrong body part, wrong patient or that they completed the wrong procedure.
According to the Joint Commission Center for Transforming Healthcare, a healthcare accreditation body, wrong-site surgeries are still a problem even after the Commission set forth guidelines meant to prevent such errors ...
Wildlife Conservation Society helps hatch rare Siamese crocodiles in Lao PDR
2011-08-31
Working with the government of Lao PDR, the Wildlife Conservation Society has helped to successfully hatch a clutch of 20 Siamese crocodiles, a species threatened across its range by hunting, habitat fragmentation and loss, and other factors.
Hatched from eggs taken from the wild and incubated at the Laos Zoo, the baby crocodiles represent a success for a new program that works to save the Siamese crocodile and the wetlands and associated biodiversity of Laos' Savannakhet Province.
The project is supported by the Savannakhet Province Agriculture and Forestry Office ...
Injured in the Line of Duty
2011-08-31
Police, firefighters, paramedics and other emergency responders risk injury and death on a daily basis. And, while the recent injuries sustained while on duty by two Maryland law enforcement officers serve as a reminder of this danger, it is important to note that the recovery period and paying medical bills after an injury may be just as great of concern as actually being injured while on duty.
While responding to a domestic violence call, an officer was shot by a man wielding a rifle. Fortunately, the officer did not sustain serious injuries.
During the same week, ...
IDSA/PIDS announce guidelines for treating pneumonia in children
2011-08-31
[EMBARGOED FOR AUG. 31, 2011, ARLINGTON, Va.] – Immunizations, including a yearly flu vaccine, are the best way to protect children from life-threatening pneumonia, according to new guidelines from the Pediatric Infectious Diseases Society (PIDS) and the Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA).
The guidelines, which are the first on diagnosing and treating community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) in infants and children, place preventing bacterial pneumonia as a top priority.
Every year, pneumonia kills more than 2 million children ages 5 years and younger worldwide. ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Study identifies candidates for therapeutic targets in pediatric germ cell tumors
Media alert: The global burden of CVD
Study illuminates contributing factors to blood vessel leakage
What nations around the world can learn from Ukraine
Mixing tree species does not always make forests more drought-resilient
Public confidence in U.S. health agencies slides, fueled by declines among Democrats
“Quantum squeezing” a nanoscale particle for the first time
El Niño spurs extreme daily rain events despite drier monsoons in India
Two studies explore the genomic diversity of deadly mosquito vectors
Zebra finches categorize their vocal calls by meaning
Analysis challenges conventional wisdom about partisan support for US science funding
New model can accurately predict a forest’s future
‘Like talking on the telephone’: Quantum computing engineers get atoms chatting long distance
Genomic evolution of major malaria-transmitting mosquito species uncovered
Overcoming the barriers of hydrogen storage with a low-temperature hydrogen battery
Tuberculosis vulnerability of people with HIV: a viral protein implicated
Partnership with Kenya's Turkana community helps scientists discover genes involved in adaptation to desert living
Decoding the selfish gene, from evolutionary cheaters to disease control
Major review highlights latest evidence on real-time test for blood – clotting in childbirth emergencies
Inspired by bacteria’s defense strategies
Research spotlight: Combination therapy shows promise for overcoming treatment resistance in glioblastoma
University of Houston co-leads $25 million NIH-funded grant to study the delay of nearsightedness in children
NRG Oncology PREDICT-RT study completes patient accrual, tests individualized concurrent therapy and radiation for high-risk prostate cancer
Taking aim at nearsightedness in kids before it’s diagnosed
With no prior training, dogs can infer how similar types of toys work, even when they don’t look alike
Three deadliest risk factors of a common liver disease identified in new study
Dogs can extend word meanings to new objects based on function, not appearance
Palaeontology: South American amber deposit ‘abuzz’ with ancient insects
Oral microbes linked to increased risk of pancreatic cancer
Soccer heading does most damage to brain area critical for cognition
[Press-News.org] Breakthrough in hydrogen fuel cellsUSC chemists develop way to safely store, extract hydrogen