From NASA to the US Navy, This Could Power ‘Infinite’ Energy
Disseminated on behalf of Infinity Fuel Cell and Hydrogen, Inc.
Truly “infinite” clean energy might be a long way off. But one thing is certain: We’re getting closer, and Infinity Fuel is a huge part of it.
Their patented air-independent fuel cell has shown that it can provide power by turning hydrogen and oxygen into water and back again in an ongoing loop.
The technology is hitting major milestones with NASA and other partners lately. And it’s happening right as investors have a new opportunity to join Infinity in their transition from R&D to commercial deals.
Here’s why this should be on every investor’s radar.
Infinity Could Power a NASA Moon Mission
For decades, Infinity Fuel has been developing air-independent energy technology with NASA, the US Navy, and commercial space partners. The technology is meant to last for long periods in the most extreme conditions, like deep underwater or in space.
Past and current members of their team have been involved in every space flight fuel cell program since NASA’s Project Gemini in the 1960s. Infinity has even sent their fuel cells aboard two Blue Origin rocket launches.
With $50M+ in contracts (past and current) to develop these systems, they’re now making strides that could bring years of successful testing to the real world.
Most recently, Infinity proved its fuel cell could survive a cold lunar night. This involved completing 2,600 hours of testing with NASA on two lunar regenerative fuel cell stacks.
But a moon mission is just one of the many ways this technology is impacting our world.
How Infinity Enables Longer US Navy Journeys
What makes Infinity’s fuel cells capable of lasting in deep space or underwater?
At the core of this innovation is a patented, air-independent fuel cell paired with a high-pressure electrolyzer system. It’s designed to store and regenerate power using hydrogen and oxygen, without requiring any external air, compressors, or noisy support systems.
This allows Infinity’s systems to operate silently and efficiently in places other power sources can’t—like submerged uncrewed underwater vehicles (UUVs) for up to 70 days, or in space during 14-day lunar nights at -280°F.
That’s what Infinity is doing for the US Navy.
But they also recently signed a preliminary partnership agreement with a leading international developer of UUVs, opening the door to a projected $11B UUV market.
The US Air Force, Infinity’s commercial space partners, and other entities are poised to benefit from this technology as well.
These are all signs that Infinity Fuel’s future is bright, and we haven’t even discussed their latest progress towards commercialization yet.
Infinity’s Commercial Partnership wth Plug Power
One of Infinity’s most exciting recent business developments was its new supplier and partner agreement with Plug Power (Nasdaq: PLUG).
Plug is a global leader in hydrogen electrolyzer tech. It gives Infinity a much bigger potential doorway to commercial markets like hydrogen-powered microgrids, subsea refueling, and clean energy for off-grid islands.
This is a huge step towards commercializing Infinity’s tech, and a big reason why they have opened a limited-time investment opportunity.
Why Investors Are Watching Infinity Fuel
With government validation, growing commercial interest, and a reserved Nasdaq ticker (IFCH), Infinity is now raising capital to scale their technology into broader markets.
The shift toward long-duration power and decentralized hydrogen infrastructure is accelerating. And Infinity Fuel represents one of the most compelling energy opportunities in the sector.
This is a paid advertisement for Infinity Fuel Cell and Hydrogen, Inc. Reg CF offering. Please read the offering circular at https://invest.infinityfuel.com/.
The post From NASA to the US Navy, This Could Power ‘Infinite’ Energy appeared first on Carbon Credits.
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