Hydrogen Fuel
See also:
While fuel cells themselves are potentially highly energy efficient, and working prototypes were made by Roger E. Billings
in the 1960s, at least four technical obstacles and other political
considerations exist regarding the development and use of a fuel
cell-powered hydrogen car.
Fuel cell cost
Currently, hydrogen fuel cells are costly to produce and fragile.
Engineers are studying how to produce inexpensive fuel cells that are
robust enough to survive the bumps and vibrations that all automobiles experience. Also, many designs require rare substances such as platinum as a catalyst
in order to work properly. Such a catalyst can also become contaminated
by impurities in the hydrogen supply. In the past few years, however, a
nickel-tin catalyst has been under development which may lower the cost of cells.[15]
Fuel cells are generally priced in USD/kW, and data is scarce
regarding costs. Ballard Power Systems is virtually alone in publishing
such data. Their 2005 figure was $73 USD/kW (based on high volume
manufacturing estimates), which they said was on track to achieve the
U.S. DoE's 2010 goal of $30 USD/kW. This would achieve closer parity
with internal combustion engines for automotive applications, allowing
a 100 kW fuel cell to be produced for $3000. 100 kW is about 134 hp.[16]
Freezing conditions
Freezing conditions are a major consideration because fuel cells
produce water and utilize moist air with varying water content. Most
fuel cell designs are fragile and cannot survive in such environments
at startup but since heat is a byproduct of the fuel cell process, the
major concern is startup capability. Ballard announced that it has
already hit the U.S. DoE's 2010 target for cold weather starting which
was 50% power achieved in 30 seconds at -20 °C.[17]
Although this is a good step, there still has to be many more
improvements in that area for fuel cells to be strong enough to hold up
to hard weather. Jackob Anderson estimates that 75% power should be
generated within 25 seconds of startup at -15 °C.[18]
Service life
Although service life is coupled to cost, fuel cells have to be
compared to existing machines with a service life in excess of 5000
hours[19] for stationary and light-duty. Marine PEM fuel cells reached the target in 2004[20] Research is going on especially for heavy duty like in the bus trails which are targeted up to a service life of 30,000 hours.
Low volumetric energy
Hydrogen has a very low volumetric energy density at ambient conditions, equal to about one-third that of methane. Even when the fuel is stored as a liquid in a cryogenic tank or in a pressurized tank,
the volumetric energy density (megajoules per liter) is small relative
to that of gasoline. Because of the energy required to compress or
liquefy the hydrogen gas, the supply chain for hydrogen has lower
well-to-tank efficiency compared to gasoline.[5] Some research has been done into using special crystalline materials to store hydrogen at greater densities and at lower pressures.
Hydrogen production cost
Molecular hydrogen can be derived chemically from a feed stock, such
as methanol, but can also be produced electrochemically from water.
Current technologies for manufacturing hydrogen use energy in various
forms, totalling between 25 and 50 percent of the higher heating value of the hydrogen fuel, to produce, compress or liquefy, and transmit the hydrogen by pipeline or truck.[21] Electrolysis, currently the most inefficient method of producing hydrogen, uses 65 percent to 112 percent of the higher heating value on a well-to-tank basis.[22] Environmental consequences of the production of hydrogen from fossil energy resources include the emission of greenhouse gases,
a consequence that would also proceed from the on-board reforming of
methanol into hydrogen. Studies comparing the environmental
consequences of hydrogen production and use in fuel cell vehicles to
the refining of petroleum and combustion in conventional automobile
engines find a net reduction of ozone and greenhouse gases in favor of
hydrogen.[1]
Hydrogen production using renewable energy resources would not create
such emissions or, in the case of biomass, would create near-zero net
emissions assuming new biomass is grown in place of that converted to
hydrogen. The scale of renewable energy use today is insufficient and
would need to be greatly increased to meet demand for widespread use in
transportation. For example, hydroelectricity accounts for approximately 6 percent of global energy use, whereas other renewable resources, such as geothermal, solar and wind comprise only about 1.4 percent of energy production as of 2004.[23] Development of renewable sources
faces barriers, and although the amount of energy produced from
renewable sources is increasing, as a percentage of worldwide energy
production, renewables decreased from 8.15% in 2000 to 7.64% of total
energy production in 2004 due to the rapid increase in coal and natural
gas production.[23] However, in some countries, hydrogen is being produced using renewable sources. For example, Iceland is using geothermal power to produce hydrogen,[24] and Denmark is using wind.[25]
In addition to the inherent losses of energy in the conversion of
feed stock to produce hydrogen which makes hydrogen less advantageous
as an energy carrier, there are economic and energy penalties
associated with packaging, distribution, storage and transfer of
hydrogen.[5]
Hydrogen infrastructure
In order to distribute hydrogen to cars, the current gasoline
fueling system would need to be replaced, or at least significantly
supplemented with hydrogen fuel stations. Hydrogen stations are being built in various places around the world.[26] Private and state initiatives like California's "California Hydrogen Highway" are already starting the infrastructure transition in advance of any manufacturers mass producing hydrogen cars.[27]
Replacement of the existing extensive gasoline fuel station
infrastructure would cost a half trillion U.S. dollars in the United
States alone.[28]
The UK has opened its first hydrogen filling station.[29]
Political considerations
Most of today's hydrogen is produced using fossil energy resources.[30]
While some advocate hydrogen produced from non-fossil resources, there
could be public resistance or technological barriers to the
implementation of such methods. For example, the United States Department of Energy currently supports research and development aimed at producing hydrogen utilizing heat from generation IV reactors.
Such nuclear power plants could be configured to cogenerate hydrogen
and electricity. Hydrogen produced in this fashion would still incur
the costs associated with transportation and compression or
liquefaction assuming direct (molecular) hydrogen is the on-board fuel.
Recently, alternative methods of creating hydrogen directly from sunlight
and water through a metallic catalyst have been announced. This may
eventually provide an economical, direct conversion of solar energy
into hydrogen a very clean solution for hydrogen production.[31]
Some in Washington advocate schemes[32]
other than hydrogen vehicles to replace the petroleum-based internal
combustion engine vehicles. Plug-in hybrids, for example, would augment
today's hybrid gasoline-electric vehicles with greater battery capacity
to enable increased use of the vehicle's electric traction motor and
reduced reliance on the combustion engine. The batteries would be
charged via the electric grid when the vehicle is parked. Electric
power transmission is about 95 percent efficient and the infrastructure
is already in place[3]. Tackling the current drawbacks of electric cars or plug-in hybrid electric vehicles
is believed by some to be easier than developing a whole new hydrogen
infrastructure that mimics the obsolete model of oil distribution. A
plug-in hybrid transportation system would face the same thermodynamic
hurdles as would a system of hydrogen vehicles relying on electrolysis
for its molecular hydrogen. The current electric grid, which is
dominated by fossil energy resources in the United States, has a
fuel-to-power efficiency of roughly 40 percent. Both the plug-in
hybrids and the electrolytic hydrogen system would be subject to these
comparative inefficiencies.
United States President George W. Bush was optimistic that these problems could be overcome with research. In his 2003 State of the Union address, he announced the U.S. government's hydrogen fuel initiative,[33] which complements the President's existing FreedomCAR
initiative for safe and cheap hydrogen fuel cell vehicles. Critics
charge that focus on the use of the hydrogen car is a dangerous detour
from more readily available solutions to reducing the use of fossil
fuels in vehicles. K.G. Duleep speculates that "a strong case exists
for continuing fuel-efficiency improvements from conventional
technology at relatively low cost."[4] Challenging perspectives to many such critics of hydrogen vehicles in particular and of a hydrogen economy in general were presented in the 2006 documentary, Who Killed the Electric Car?
President Bush's hydrogen car goals, in the opinion of some writers,
are slipping away because "there are quicker, cleaner, safer and
cheaper ways to reduce the tail-pipe emissions from cars and trucks
that pollute the air and contribute to global warming." According to
physicist and former U.S. Department of Energy official Joseph Romm,
"A hydrogen car is one of the least efficient, most expensive ways to
reduce greenhouse gases." Asked when hydrogen cars will be broadly
available, Romm replied: "Not in our lifetime, and very possibly never."[4] As an article published in the March/April 2007 issue of Technology Review argued,
In the context of the overall energy economy, a car like the BMW
Hydrogen 7 would probably produce far more carbon dioxide emissions
than gasoline-powered cars available today. And changing this
calculation would take multiple breakthroughs--which study after study
has predicted will take decades, if they arrive at all. In fact, the
Hydrogen 7 and its hydrogen-fuel-cell cousins are, in many ways, simply
flashy distractions produced by automakers who should be taking
stronger immediate action to reduce the greenhouse-gas emissions of
their cars.[2]
Alternatives
Electric cars, such as the General Motors EV1 are typically more efficient than fuel cell-powered vehicles on a well-to-wheel basis. As Technology Review
noted in June 2008, "Electric cars—and plug-in hybrid cars—have an
enormous advantage over hydrogen fuel-cell vehicles in utilizing
low-carbon electricity. That is because of the inherent inefficiency of
the entire hydrogen fueling process, from generating the hydrogen with
that electricity to transporting this diffuse gas long distances,
getting the hydrogen in the car, and then running it through a fuel
cell—all for the purpose of converting the hydrogen back into
electricity to drive the same exact electric motor you'll find in an
electric car.[35][36] For this reason, battery powered vehicles are gaining popularity, particularly with the introduction of new models like the Tesla Roadster.[37]

References
- ^ a b
Schultz, M.G., Thomas Diehl, Guy P. Brasseur, and Werner Zittel. Air
Pollution and Climate-Forcing Impacts of a Global Hydrogen Economy.
Science 24 October 2003 302: 624-627[1]
- ^ a b c d From TechnologyReview.com "Hell and Hydrogen", March 2007
- ^ Squatriglia, Chuck (May 12, 2008). "Hydrogen Cars Won't Make a Difference for 40 Years". Wired. CondéNet, Inc. Retrieved on 2008-05-13.
- ^ a b c Boyd, Robert S. (May 15, 2007). "Hydrogen cars may be a long time coming". McClatchy Newspapers. Retrieved on 2008-05-09.
- ^ a b c [http://www.efcf.com/reports/E21.pdf EFCF paper on hydrogen efficiency
- ^ See
Novelli, P.C., P.M. Lang, K.A. Masarie, D.F. Hurst, R. Myers, and J.W.
Elkins. (1999). "Molecular Hydrogen in the troposphere: Global
distribution and budget". J. Geophys. Res. 104(30): 427-30.
- ^ F. Kreith, "Fallacies of a Hydrogen Economy: A Critical Analysis of Hydrogen Production and Utilization" in Journal of Energy Resources Technology (2004), 126: 249–257.
- ^ GaleGroup.com info
- ^ http://www.gm.com/company/gmability/adv_tech/100_news/fc_fleet_launch_091806.html
- ^ Article from German Press Agency
- ^ GM, Edward Taylor and Mike Spector. "Toyota Doubtful on Fuel Cells' Mass Use", The Wall Street Journal, March 5, 2008
- ^ a b Article on Ballard's exit from the hydrogen vehicle industry
- ^ [2]
- ^ Thames & Kosmos kit, Other educational materials, and many more demonstration car kits.
- ^ "COE researchers engineer low-cost catalyst for hydrogen production"
- ^ Ballard "2006 achievements" press release
- ^ From the Ballard website
- ^ Andersons guide to fuelcells, pros and cons
- ^ EERE Service life 5000 hours
- ^ Marine PEM fuel cell service life
- ^ F.
Kreith (2004). "Fallacies of a Hydrogen Economy: A Critical Analysis of
Hydrogen Production and Utilization". Journal of Energy Resources
Technology 126: 249–257.
- ^ Ulf Bossel,Energy and the Hydrogen Economy
- ^ a b US Energy Information Administration, "World Primary Energy Production by Source, 1970-2004"
- ^ Iceland's hydrogen buses zip toward oil-free economy accessed 17-July-2007
- ^ First Danish Hydrogen Energy Plant Is Operational accessed 17-July-2007
- ^ Information from Fuelcells.org
- ^ See this information from hydrogenhighway.ca.gov and this information from rps.psu.edu
- ^ Romm, Joseph (2004). The Hype about Hydrogen, Fact and Fiction in the Race to Save the Climate. New York: Island Press. (ISBN 1-55963-703-X), Chapter 5
- ^ http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/7351915.stm
- ^ Air Products and Chemicals website
- ^ Information from rps.psu.edu
- ^ Plug-in Hybrid Advocacy Group
- ^ Hydrogen.gov
- ^ Romm, Joseph and Prof. Andrew A. Frank "Hybrid Vehicles Gain Traction", Scientific American (April 2006)
- ^ "The Last Car You Would Ever Buy – Literally: Why we shouldn't get excited by the latest hydrogen cars", Technology Review, June 18, 2008
- ^ Energy efficiency comparison article
- ^ Information from cta.ornl.gov
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from Wikipedia Encyclopedia article "Hydrogen Vehicle"
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