You don't need to get electricity by dangerously detonating hydrogen.
The picture above is a hydrogen fuel cell made by Hyundai. It can produce about 95kW of electricity, so in terms of horsepower, it can produce about 127 horsepower, which is a level that can supply about 200 households of electricity.
There is no need to create electricity by exploding hydrogen that is difficult and dangerous.
It is a fuel cell structure using hydrogen and oxygen.
A method of generating electricity by combining (reacting) hydrogen and oxygen is called a fuel cell. It is used in submarines and is also used as an emergency generator in large buildings.
What is important here is the reaction rate, that is, whether humans can control the reaction rate.
In general, the word "explosion" refers to a time when you can't control your reaction rate and react on its own, so your question needs to be modified a bit.
Explosions cannot generate electricity.
Any chemical or physical explosion can produce electricity (with certain devices added). It's just a matter of efficiency, so we don't actually produce it.
Second Answer
You don't need to get electricity by dangerously detonating hydrogen.
The picture above is a hydrogen fuel cell made by Hyundai. It can produce about 95kW of electricity, so in terms of horsepower, it can produce about 127 horsepower, which is a level that can supply about 200 households of electricity.
There is no need to create electricity by exploding hydrogen that is difficult and dangerous.
It is a fuel cell structure using hydrogen and oxygen.
First answer
A method of generating electricity by combining (reacting) hydrogen and oxygen is called a fuel cell. It is used in submarines and is also used as an emergency generator in large buildings.
What is important here is the reaction rate, that is, whether humans can control the reaction rate.
In general, the word "explosion" refers to a time when you can't control your reaction rate and react on its own, so your question needs to be modified a bit.
Explosions cannot generate electricity.
Any chemical or physical explosion can produce electricity (with certain devices added). It's just a matter of efficiency, so we don't actually produce it.