News

Ammonia and smelling salts have long been used as a stimulant by NFL players as well as other athletes, though the risks that ...
The NFL banned teams from supplying and providing players with ammonia-related products such as smelling salts. Players have ...
The National Football League announced Tuesday it will ban the use of smelling salts and similar products during games.
For years, NFL players - and athletes in other sports - routinely relied on smelling salts or ammonia capsules to jolt ...
The auction logged a record-low price of INR 55.75 per kilogram. The Solar Energy Corporation of India Limited (SECI) has conducted the first auction for the procurement of green ammonia under the ...
The new sensor, which incorporates silicon nanowire, is compatible with existing technology and is simple to produce ...
Andreas Enger, CEO of Höegh Autoliners, is sending ammonia demand signals to new fuel producers but doing it in a way that ...
Larsen & Toubro (L&T) is considering offering minority stakes to global off-takers in its green hydrogen and ammonia projects across India.
Introducing ammonia for long-haul shipping Ammonia is known by many as a foul-smelling, toxic chemical used in agriculture and cleaning products. But it's also a flexible fuel and energy carrier.
Ammonia, made of hydrogen and nitrogen, doesn’t emit carbon dioxide and can be mixed with coal at power plants to lower carbon emissions.
Japan says that by blending ammonia with coal in its boilers, it can make coal less damaging to the planet. But the technology faces many hurdles. By Motoko Rich and Hikari Hida Reporting from ...
Bacteria thrive on it, red blood cells carry it in high concentration, yet the human brain can’t tolerate it. The ability of cells to acquire or dispose of ammonia can be a matter of life and death.