The Luxury Portal: Video News, Fashion and Entertainment

Tuesday Dec. 2nd, 2008 Home | Add to Favorites | Tell A Friend
JustLuxe Television
LifeStyle Videos News Videos Business Videos Entertainment Videos Music Videos Movie Videos Sport Videos
....advertisement....
LifeStyle
Aircraft
Arts & Culture
Autos & Vehicles
Boats & Yachts
Clubs & Memberships
Electronics
Jewelry & Watches
Leisure
Real Estate & Homes
LuxeConcepts
LuxeConcepts
City Guides
The Best of Luxury
News & Videos
FineLiving
Food & Spirits
Home Décor
Fashion & Style
LuxuryTravel
Hotels
Resorts
Spas
See All Categories
LuxeCulture
Events Calendar
Museums & Galleries
Blogs
LuxeInfo
About Us
Luxury Classifieds NEW
Advertise
License Content
Article Archive
SiteMap
Newsletter
Recommend Websites
Resource Guides
Fine Luxury Listings
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind., Feb. 25 (UPI)

New aluminum-rich alloy is developed

U.S. scientists have developed an economically competitive aluminum-rich alloy that produces hydrogen from water.

We now have an economically viable process for producing hydrogen-on-demand for vehicles, electrical generating stations and other applications, said Purdue University Professor Jerry Woodall, the inventor of the process.

Woodall said his new alloy contains 95 percent aluminum and 5 percent of a mixture of the metals gallium, indium and tin. Because the new alloy contains significantly less of the more expensive gallium than previous forms of the alloy, hydrogen can be produced less expensively, he said.

When immersed in water, the alloy splits water molecules into hydrogen and oxygen, which immediately reacts with the aluminum to produce aluminum oxide, also called alumina, which can be recycled back into aluminum. Recycling aluminum from nearly pure alumina is less expensive than mining the aluminum ore bauxite, making the technology more competitive with other forms of energy production, Woodall said.

The researchers are to present their findings Tuesday in Cocoa Beach, Fla., during the Materials Innovations in an Emerging Hydrogen Economy conference.

Copyright 2008 by United Press International