Object Details
Manufacturer
General Electric Company
Summary
This fuel cell is a simulator version of the electric-power generating device used on the two-astronaut Gemini spacecraft during seven missions in 1965-66. A fuel cell is like a battery, in that it uses a chemical reaction to create an electrical current. Unlike a battery, a fuel cell will continue to generate a current as long as the reactants are supplied. The Gemini fuel cell used liquid oxygen and liquid hydrogen to generate electricity, with water as a byproduct. Oxygen and hydrogen molecules reacted and combined across a "proton exchange membrane," a thin permeable polymer sheet coated with a platinum catalyst.
The Gemini program pioneered the use of fuel cells in space, and this technology was subsequently used in the Apollo Service Module and the Space Shuttle Orbiter. General Electric, the manufacturer of Gemini fuel cells, gave this artifact to the Smithsonian in 1971.
Credit Line
Gift of the General Electric Company, Aircraft Engine Group
Inventory Number
A19731128000
Restrictions & Rights
Usage conditions apply
Type
SPACECRAFT-Crewed-Electrical Power
Materials
Aluminum, Plastic, Steel, Stainless Steel, Paper, Rubber (Silicone), Cadmium Plating, Magnesium, Titanium, Gold Plating, Brass, Copper, Acrylic (Plexiglas), Paint
Dimensions
Storage (Rehoused on aluminum pallet with three additional objects): 123.8 × 174.6 × 145.4cm, 231.3kg (48 3/4 × 68 3/4 × 57 1/4 in., 510lb.)
Country of Origin
United States of America
See more items in
National Air and Space Museum Collection
Data Source
National Air and Space Museum
Link to Original Record
Record ID
nasm_A19731128000