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A Fuel Cell is an electrochemical device that uses two redox processes to transform the chemical energy of a fuel (typically hydrogen) and an oxidising agent (commonly oxygen) into electricity. Unlike most batteries, Fuel Cels require a constant supply of fuel and oxygen (often from air) to sustain the chemical reaction. In contrast, a battery typically derives its chemical energy from materials that are already present in the battery. Fuel Cels can continually generate power as long as fuel and oxygen are available.
The first Fuel Cell in 1838. More than a century after Francis Thomas Bacon created the hydrogen-oxygen Fuel Cell, the first Fuel Cel was used commercially. Since the middle of the 1960s, NASA space programmes have used the alkaline Fuel Cel, often known as the Bacon Fuel Cel after its inventor, to power satellites and spacecraft.
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