vrijdag 17 april 2026

Engineers just demonstrated a hydrogen combustion engine that extracts its fuel directly from atmospheric water vapor — running continuously on humidity alone with zero carbon emissions and zero external fuel supply required.

 


Engineers just demonstrated a hydrogen combustion engine that extracts its fuel directly from atmospheric water vapor — running continuously on humidity alone with zero carbon emissions and zero external fuel supply required.
A team from the Korea Institute of Energy Research developed an atmospheric water harvesting system using metal-organic framework sorbents that extract water vapor from air at humidities as low as 20% — capturing 4.7 liters of water per kilogram of sorbent material per day. This water feeds a solid oxide electrolyzer splitting it into hydrogen and oxygen using 2.3 kilowatts of electrical input from integrated solar panels. The hydrogen powers a modified combustion engine producing 8.7 kilowatts of continuous mechanical output — a net energy gain of 6.4 kilowatts from atmospheric humidity alone.
The system operates continuously day and night — solar panels charge a supercapacitor buffer during daylight ensuring uninterrupted hydrogen production through the night. Field testing across 60 days in semi-arid Korean conditions confirmed reliable operation at ambient humidities between 25 and 85%.
Source: Korea Institute of Energy Research, Advanced Energy Materials, 2024

Scientists just demonstrated a solid-state battery achieving full charge in 90 seconds while retaining 99.7% of stored energy after 6 months of idle storage

 


Scientists just demonstrated a solid-state battery achieving full charge in 90 seconds while retaining 99.7% of stored energy after 6 months of idle storage — simultaneously solving the two biggest problems in battery technology.
Researchers at MIT developed a lithium ceramic solid electrolyte battery replacing conventional liquid electrolyte with a superionic ceramic conductor. The solid interface eliminates the slow lithium-ion diffusion bottleneck of liquid electrolytes — enabling charging rates 200 times faster than standard lithium-ion batteries. The same ceramic structure creates an almost perfectly hermetic seal around stored charge — virtually eliminating the self-discharge that causes conventional batteries to lose 20 to 30 percent of charge monthly during storage.
Testing across 5,000 charge cycles showed capacity retention of 96.8% — meaning the battery still performs near-new after 5,000 full charges. The solid electrolyte also eliminates the flammability risk of liquid electrolyte batteries entirely.
This technology enables electric vehicles charging in under 2 minutes, grid energy storage with negligible seasonal losses, and electronic devices holding charge for months without use.
Source: MIT Research Laboratory of Electronics, Nature Energy, 2024

At 90% complete, the $8.4 billion NEOM Green Hydrogen facility is the largest green hydrogen project on Earth

 


At 90% complete, the $8.4 billion NEOM Green Hydrogen facility is the largest green hydrogen project on Earth in the final sprint toward commissioning. Reports confirm the project is "nearing completion," with a major ammonia export deal almost finalised. 💧⚡🧊 In 2026, this is the clearest signal yet that hydrogen diplomacy is becoming hydrogen logistics.
The facility's design integrates renewable power—wind and solar—with massive electrolysers to produce green hydrogen, then converts it to ammonia for export. Ammonia is the carrier: easier to ship, easier to store, and already traded globally as a fertiliser feedstock. Repurposing that trade infrastructure for clean energy is one of the cleverest shortcuts in the energy transition.
The strategic stakes are sharp. Saudi Arabia is explicitly building a post-oil identity through projects like NEOM, and green hydrogen is the centrepiece of that narrative. If the facility exports commercially and establishes a price reference, it can define what "competitive green hydrogen" means globally for years.
But 2026 is also when scrutiny intensifies. Critics ask: what is the lifecycle carbon of the ammonia, given grid and logistics energy inputs? Are water sources sustainable in a desert setting? And will the export price undercut early European electrolyser projects, destabilising the investment case for domestic production elsewhere? ⚖️🌍
The answers will determine whether NEOM becomes a hydrogen benchmark—or a cautionary tale about megaproject scale without ecosystem discipline. Source #NEOMHydrogen #GreenAmmonia #HydrogenExport #SaudiEnergyShift #LargestH2Plant #CleanFuelTrade

German Researchers have unveiled an experimental injectable gel designed to support the regeneration of damaged knee cartilage—without the need for surgery or artificial implants.

 


BREAKING: A new medical breakthrough from Germany is starting to turn heads worldwide.
Researchers have unveiled an experimental injectable gel designed to support the regeneration of damaged knee cartilage—without the need for surgery or artificial implants.
Early reports suggest this cutting-edge approach could open the door to a less invasive way of addressing joint issues often linked to aging, injuries, or long-term wear and tear. Instead of traditional procedures that require downtime and recovery, this innovation focuses on a simpler method that may help the body respond differently at the joint level.
For millions of people dealing with knee discomfort and limited mobility, developments like this are drawing serious attention. Experts say advancements in regenerative medicine and biotechnology are rapidly changing how joint health may be approached in the future.
While research is still ongoing, one thing is clear—this could mark a major shift in how people think about joint care and mobility in the years ahead.