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Hydrogen as Fossil Fuel Clean Replacement - 4/8/2007 2:43:12 PM   
Real0ne


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Does anyone know what the hold up is?   This guy claims 4 ounces of water to drive 100 miles.  If that is true then why are we not seeing "on demand" hydrogen generators for our cars?  Pretty tough to imagine not being able to boil off 4 ounces of water in an hour an 1/2.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GfXNtIv5HyA

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-813727532577660991&q=hydrogen+power
This guy says 22 gallons of water to go from La to Ny

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=5502240084388841554&q=hydrogen+power
a simple fuel cell

http://www.hydrogen.energy.gov/pdfs/progress05/iv_h_6_pile.pdf



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RE: Hydrogen as Fossil Fuel Clean Replacement - 4/8/2007 2:48:47 PM   
LadyEllen


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The delay is in that even Halliburton and co dont have the money to build enough ships to grab hold of all the water on the planet.

Oh I'm cynical from time to time

E

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RE: Hydrogen as Fossil Fuel Clean Replacement - 4/8/2007 3:15:04 PM   
Rule


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At most only forty per cent of the energy that is in fuel can be usefully extracted - usually it is less.
 
Hydrogen is used as an energy carrier. That means that at most forty per cent of the energy of an energy source is usefully applied to produce hydrogen from water. When this hydrogen is burned again it yields at most forty per cent of the energy stored in it. So there is a loss of sixty per cent of useful energy. Hydrogen therefore yields a lot less energy than oil.

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RE: Hydrogen as Fossil Fuel Clean Replacement - 4/8/2007 3:18:29 PM   
cyberdude611


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Real0ne

Does anyone know what the hold up is?   This guy claims 4 ounces of water to drive 100 miles.  If that is true then why are we not seeing "on demand" hydrogen generators for our cars?  Pretty tough to imagine not being able to boil off 4 ounces of water in an hour an 1/2.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GfXNtIv5HyA

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-813727532577660991&q=hydrogen+power
This guy says 22 gallons of water to go from La to Ny

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=5502240084388841554&q=hydrogen+power
a simple fuel cell

http://www.hydrogen.energy.gov/pdfs/progress05/iv_h_6_pile.pdf




1. The science isn't advanced enough yet.
2. Implimentation is a problem.
3. The global economy is completely oil-driven right now.

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RE: Hydrogen as Fossil Fuel Clean Replacement - 4/8/2007 3:24:32 PM   
Termyn8or


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Quick one Real, the four ounces of water are cheap, it is the hundreds of kilowatt hours of energy needed to extract the hydrogen are not.

That may be an exaggeration, but it does hold true.

And I do not dismiss the oil cartels have been sabotaging the research, BY FUNDING IT.

Did you all get that ? They sabotage it by funding it. Understand that and you will know alot more about WHY the world is the way it is.

T

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RE: Hydrogen as Fossil Fuel Clean Replacement - 4/8/2007 3:36:55 PM   
luckydog1


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Part of the delay is he wants to get it pateneted, and it has to be tested, ect.  The clip is of vuage on how it splits the water, but does say it takes electricity.  Millennium Cell is another company with a great idea, they are traded on Nasdaq.  http://www.millenniumcell.com/fw/main/Overview-27.html  Basically they put sodium borohydride (NaBH4) intoa water solution then intorduce a catlyst and get instant  hydrogen at an easily controllable rate.  None of the materials is paticularly toxic  it is essentially a borax like the household cleaner and salt. 

When you really consider changing over a society you have to look at it reasonably.  Vehicles are not going to come first.  Stationary and Portable Power systems will come first.  Also there is the Betamax paradox, we could decide on a technology now, the gov could use its power to force everyone into it, train a million techs, Manhattan Project style.  Only to find out after the 5 year plan there was much better way, and we have wasted trillions of dollars.  Bush actually is putting this stuff into the army and it is being deployed, but it is all in the Beta phase right now.  If you look there are dozens of competing ideas for generation of hydrogen, real companies actually developing things. 

They hydrogen economy will be incredible.

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RE: Hydrogen as Fossil Fuel Clean Replacement - 4/8/2007 3:45:44 PM   
luckydog1


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actually Rule, thats not true about the 40% maximum, it may be if you burn it.  But fuel cells do not burn anything, there is a chemical reaction.  They have an amazing system where the take Natural gas, and pass it through a Catalytic refomer(which strips the hydrogen  out by a chemical reaction, requiring no energy-just periodic maintence- and then runs it into a fuel cell to make electricity.  Now it does lose a signifcant amount of energy in this process as heat.  But this system is set up to capture the heat to heat water.  Our post office has this system set up, and it sends power and hot water to the airport terminal also.  With virtually no carbon output.  They get well over 2x the amount of power with much less pollution than if they just burned the natural gas to make the same amount of hot water.  We as a speicies are still in a fire based economy/technology.  Even a nuclear plant simply makes a nuclear fire to boil water to spin a turbine.  We have to get beyond burning things.

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RE: Hydrogen as Fossil Fuel Clean Replacement - 4/8/2007 4:36:16 PM   
N4SDChastity


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^^^So, what's the cost of the natural gas?  Extraction/processing/delivering/consuming?  It's STILL not "free," is it?

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RE: Hydrogen as Fossil Fuel Clean Replacement - 4/8/2007 4:50:34 PM   
Sinergy


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quote:

ORIGINAL: N4SDChastity

^^^So, what's the cost of the natural gas?  Extraction/processing/delivering/consuming?  It's STILL not "free," is it?


Exactly.

My reading of this article talks about a hydrogen "battery" that stores energy.

Still have to make the energy somehow to store in the battery.

Sinergy

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RE: Hydrogen as Fossil Fuel Clean Replacement - 4/8/2007 6:12:38 PM   
N4SDChastity


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BTW, Luckydog1, I hate to break it to you but chemical reactions produce/consume ENERGY, too.

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RE: Hydrogen as Fossil Fuel Clean Replacement - 4/8/2007 7:23:54 PM   
Tuomas


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Anyone have any idea how he did it? Because this is awesome.


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RE: Hydrogen as Fossil Fuel Clean Replacement - 4/8/2007 11:53:04 PM   
shallowdeep


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quote:

Does anyone know what the hold up is?   This guy claims 4 ounces of water to drive 100 miles.  If that is true then why are we not seeing "on demand" hydrogen generators for our cars? 


The holdup is that hydrogen is not a (terrestrial) fuel source and never will be. The reason is that hydrogen does not exist in substantial quantities in a pure form on this planet. As a result, the only way to get it is to break the chemical bonds of some hydrogen containing compound. The two major types of hydrogen containing compounds available are fossil fuels and water.

Fossil fuels have the advantage that it's relative easy (i.e. doesn't require much energy) to break the hydrocarbon bonds. The downside it that you have leftover carbon. In the most common method of getting energy from fossil fuels, combustion, the carbon is released primarily as carbon dioxide and the hydrogen is immediately combined with oxygen to form water, releasing heat in the process. Other, more controlled, reactions are possible, as luckydog1 pointed out, that leave you with hydrogen. However, these still have the problems with carbon emissions (although it may be easier to sequester the carbon) and aren't much (if any) more efficient than a well engineered (and typically much cheaper) natural gas generator that puts waste heat to work. For an example of such convential fuel co-generation (heat/electricity) devices, see this article.

Water has the advantage that there is no carbon to deal with, but the major disadvantage that the element that you want to combine the hydrogen with (either by burning it or putting it through a fuel cell) is oxygen, the very same element that the hydrogen was initially bound to in the water. Conservation of energy and the universe's always increasing entropy, extremely fundamental principles of our scientific understanding (the First and Second Laws of thermodynamics), tell us that there is no way to take water, break it into hydrogen and oxygen, recombine the hydrogen and oxygen back into water and get out any useable net energy. Hopefully, that isn't too surprising. Basically, you can think of water as having a low potential (chemical) energy. You can separate it into hydrogen and oxygen, but doing so requires an energy input to raise it to this higher potential, usually in the form of the electricity used for electrolysis. Recombining to form water again lowers the potential back to the initial level and allows for the recovery of energy, but the energy recovered can be no greater than the energy put in (and, due to inefficiencies, is always at least somewhat less). As a result, there is no way to get "clean" energy from water. As other posters have pointed out it is more appropriate to think of the combination of electrolysis and fuel cells as a sort of "battery" or energy storage system, not a source of energy production.

As to the three linked videos/articles, my analysis of each:

1. 4 oz. of water to go 100 miles.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GfXNtIv5HyA

The video is rather misleading. If you actually look into what Klein did, he used a limited amount of electrolysis produced hydrogen as an additive to a standard, gasoline powered engine. So, the "4 oz. of water" was in addition to the gasoline used for the trip. From his website: http://hytechapps.com/aquygen, we see the more plausible claim that his system can enhance "the fuel-efficiency of a traditional gasoline or diesel engine 25-30%". Using the idling engine power when stopped and/or regenerative braking to drive electrolysis and then injecting the produced hydrogen gas into the fuel could improve efficiency in much the same way that standard battery hybrids, like the Prius, do. However, burning the hydrogen in an internal combustion engine (as he appears to do) isn't terribly efficient and might cause problems for an engine designed to run on gas if used long-term. The basic idea isn't bad, since the added weight and toxic materials of large battery packs are the major downsides of current hybrids, but there is nothing revolutionary here. Unfortunately, based on the website, Klein doesn't really seem to understand chemistry... and probably thinks he has something of a larger breakthrough than he does, hence the hype. I'm more than willing to give him the benefit of the doubt as a well-intentioned guy with insufficient educational background... but there is also the possibility he's just trying to sucker in dumb investors.

2. "Fuel Cell Dune Buggy"
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-813727532577660991&q=hydrogen+power

Taken from the 1980s, I'm assuming (from the hair and references to Reagan's "Star Wars" system and oil embargoes), this is little more than a demo of hydrolysis and isn't even a fuel cell (in the sense the term is currently used). The guy is using electrolysis (which consumes a bunch of electrical energy) to produce some hydrogen which he then burns as fuel in his dune buggy. Again, it would require more energy to generate the hydrogen than you would get back from burning it.

3. "A simple Fuel Cell"
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=5502240084388841554&q=hydrogen+power
Again, this is not a fuel cell, but an electrolysis device. The technique is no different than that practiced since the pioneers of electrochemistry in the first half of the 19th century, making the overly theatrical sound track... well, a little overly theatrical. This device is actually consuming electrical energy to split water into hydrogen and oxygen. Later the hydrogen can be recombined with oxygen either by burning it or using a fuel cell, but even with no inefficiencies the energy regained will not exceed what went into it.

4. Increasing the Efficiency of the Water Electrolysis Cell
http://www.hydrogen.energy.gov/pdfs/progress05/iv_h_6_pile.pdf
A 2004 paper discussing some research into water electrolysis for hydrogen production. It's interesting to note that target efficiency for 2010, not yet obtained, is only 76%. So, in the real world we can see that significant inefficiencies exist in electrolysis.


Conclusions
So, with all that said... why is there all this the hype about a future "hydrogen economy"? Is hydrogen as part of an energy infrastructure useful at all?

First, I need to reiterate that hydrogen is not a solution to energy problems because it is not a source of energy. However, if used properly, it could reduce our energy inefficiencies and eliminate much reliance on oil as an energy source.

Hydrogen usually comes up in the context of cars. The internal combustion engine is simple, but remarkably inefficient. Only about 20% of the fuel energy is converted into useful energy, the rest goes to waste as heat. A hydrogen infrastructure would allow for these many, inefficient engines to be replaced by fewer, more efficient power stations. A combined cycle power plant can be close to 60% efficient. A fuel cell that recombines oxygen and hydrogen can be 80-90% efficient. Electric motors, which a fuel cell would power can be over 90% efficient. Assuming a 60% efficient power plant, 5% transmission losses in power lines, 70% efficient hydrolysis, 80% efficient fuel cell, and 90% efficient motor, such a system could be close to 30% efficient, a 50% increase in efficiency that could reduce energy consumption for cars by a third. It might actually be better as the heavy engine in a car could be replaced by a lighter fuel cell, saving energy due to weight reduction and possibly making cars safer for the same reason. Additionally, with electric motors and fuel cells there is no need to idle the engine when stopped, which gives some of the savings that hybrids experience in city driving.

Furthermore, once freed of the internal combustion engine, there is no need to rely on petroleum as the fuel source. For political and economic reasons there are obvious advantages to this. From an environmental standpoint the ability to use more nuclear, solar, wind, etc. is also a major advantage. However, this brings up the problem that, currently, power for electrolysis would come from the current power grid... which is has far too many inefficient and dirty old plants and far too few clean ones. At present, a full switch to hydrogen might actually make things worse environmentally. A switch to hydrogen might still make some sense, but water hydrolysis for hydrogen production would have to be extensively supplemented by chemical cracking of hydrocarbons, which leaves all the carbon emission problems to deal with.

In a future where the power grid has a higher composition of clean generation facilities (or we finally develop a practical fusion reactor -- one can dream), hydrogen will make a lot of sense as it will let our transportation energy requirements tap into a clean source of power. Until that time approaches, I think that we would be better served by implementing existing technologies to improve efficiency, like hybrid gas/electircs, much more extensively and advocating for the construction of such clean power generation facilities. I see this as a much better use of resources over at least the next decade than extensively developing a hydrogen infrastructure.

The other reason why hydrogen hasn't caught on yet is that, after many years of research, there still isn't a great way to store it for use in a vehicle. As a gas it occupies much more space than liquid gasoline, so something has to be done or cars won't be going very far on a tank. Compressing it is the obvious solution, but brings some safety issues... fuel/air explosives can be nasty =). A promising solution may be metal hydrides, but so far I'm not aware of any commercial quality solution. Of course, there is also the need to build up an entire hydrogen infrastructure: production, distribution, transportation, and storage. Those perhaps best suited for undertaking the task, gas station owners and oil companies, don't yet have sufficient economic incentive.

Another way that hydrogen could help improve efficiency is in the power grid itself. Currently, to ensure there are no blackouts/brownouts, power is consistently overproduced and wasted. The reason is that it takes time to bring a conventional power plant on or offline so, there is always a bit extra production online above peak expectations so that a sudden spike in demand won't degrade or bring down the system. With a hydrolysis/fuel cell system hooked up to the grid and carefully monitored some of this wasted excess could be shifted to hydrogen for storage and, during demand spikes or when reservoirs were full, the hydrogen could be used to generate power. Such a system could be switched between generation and storage very quickly (since there are no turbines to fire up, etc.) and could potentially improve the grid's efficiency and also reliability.

The world's current energy policy is unsustainable both from an economic and environmental standpoint and the sooner we start to fix things the better. However, those concerned need to know enough to support the right technologies and to make a strong argument for the necessity of alternatives to the current system... hopefully this helps a little on that front.

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RE: Hydrogen as Fossil Fuel Clean Replacement - 4/9/2007 1:44:37 AM   
luckydog1


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Of course its not free N4, nothing is.  You get a much greater efficiency than if you burn it, with far less pollution.  Yes chemical reactions can produce or consume energy, the specific reaction I am refering to produces energy.  The bromide solution in the Millenium Cell gets warm from the reaction. The reaction also produces a steady stream of Hydogen gas, which can be fed into a fuel cell or burned to create useful energy.  But you do not have to introduce energy to make the reaction happen, which is why I used the term Catalytic reaction.

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RE: Hydrogen as Fossil Fuel Clean Replacement - 4/9/2007 2:06:41 AM   
luckydog1


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Shallow, there are other methods of getting hydorgen than the ones you mention.  I gave one to this thread already.  It is very easy to sequester carbon from a natural gas catlytic reaction, it comes out as a solid.  Hydrogen will not be used in cars first, that makes little sense.  Stationary and portable power generation will come first.  Exposing the system to extreme temperature variations and banging it around the roads will cause all sorts of problems.  Hydrogen is a gas and can be compresed in a tank if needed, but there are hydrogen on demand systems.  A tank of hydrogen is no more dangerous than a tank of gasoline in a wreck, if your tank is punctured you are toast.  Of course the hydrogen would go up as opposed to the leaking gasoline which would pool Under the wreck.  Hydrogen can be stored at various PSI, its not really an issue.  Test cars can go 300 + miles on a  fillup.  Though I agree the world is not ready for hydrogen cars, yet.  The infrastructure is not in place, and there are a few bugs to work out..

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RE: Hydrogen as Fossil Fuel Clean Replacement - 4/9/2007 10:23:36 AM   
samboct


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Shallow

Nice post- it sounds like we're on the same page.  (if you'd like to see for yourself, I suggest this post here http://www.collarchat.com/m_935074/tm.htm)

A nit or two if I may-

Electrolysis to produce hydrogen is terribly inefficient at this point.  Most hydrogen today is produced from steam reforming- and consequently is often based on fossil fuels.

I agree with you that the storage and transport of hydrogen remain problematic- there's been very little headway on hydrides in the past decade or so.  I suspect I'm a bit more cynical than you in terms of the rationale behind the push to a hydrogen economy.

Combined cycle plants may exceed 50% efficiency in theory- but in practice, it doesn't seem to have happened yet.  There's a materials problem that's not so easy- how to transfer the heat from superheated steam to water using a heat exchanger is a problem- plus there's a scale (basically gunk that forms) problem as well since you're not using pure steam.  Surprisingly, wind and solar are coming on quite strongly in this century.  Also- (and this one surprised me) flywheel energy storage may be the way to go to damp out the grid fluctuations you're rightfully concerned about.

Regards,

Sam

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RE: Hydrogen as Fossil Fuel Clean Replacement - 4/9/2007 10:28:22 AM   
LuckyAlbatross


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Watch Who Killed the Electric Car.  I can't say how accurate it all is, but it was pretty interesting.

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RE: Hydrogen as Fossil Fuel Clean Replacement - 4/9/2007 11:58:15 AM   
shallowdeep


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Luckydog1,

I'd like to, hopefully, clear up what I percive as a bit of lingering confusion about hydrogen as an energy source as well as respond to some of your other points. I hope you find it useful.

quote:

"Shallow, there are other methods of getting hydorgen than the ones you mention."

Yes there are. In the case of hydrogen from water I limited my discussion to hydrolysis because it is the most commonly mentioned technique, but allowed for other possibilities, as I'll restate:

quote:

"You can separate it into hydrogen and oxygen, but doing so requires an energy input to raise it to this higher potential, usually in the form of the electricity used for electrolysis." (emphasis added)

The point is that it doesn't matter what technique you use to separate the hydrogen from the oxygen, be it electrolysis, heating, chemical reaction, or atom sized tractor beams. If you plan on recombining the water and oxygen there will be no net energy gain from the creation and consumption of hydrogen. There is simply no way around this.

In the case of a chemical reaction, like the one you mentioned, the external electrical energy used in electrolysis is replaced with the external chemical energy from sodium borohydride. When you claim this reaction doesn't require energy input you're right, but only when viewed in isolation. Using the same logic you could argue that gasoline combustion in an internal engine, a highly exothermic reaction, requires no energy. This is strictly true when looking at the engine in isolation, but really isn't very helpful. We need to look at the system as a whole.

Exactly like gasoline, the sodium borohydride is serving as a chemical fuel that is being consumed by the reaction. In the case of sodium borohydride, things would be nice if we had a huge supply of it lying around (in the same way it's nice to have a huge supply of fossil fuels lying around) because we would have just found another energy source (note that the energy source would be the sodium borohydride, NOT the hydrogen though). However, it should come as no surprise that a compound that reacts with water is hard to find in nature. To get sodium borohydride, we have to make it. This is typically done commercially by adding hydrogen to boron salts... a process which takes energy. More energy, in fact, than you get by combining it with water to release hydrogen.

I've digressed into this one process, but I don't want to lose the overall thread. There are lots of ways to get hydrogen, but they boil down to two cases:

1. Take hydrocarbons with a high potential energy and extract hydrogen. Essentially, this is a refinement of our current processes of burning fuels. With it come carbon emission issues and, if the hydrocarbons are fossil fuels, consumption of non-renewable resources present in existing processes, albeit the details and efficiencies may change.

2. Split hydrogen from water. This requires an external source of energy. That external source of energy can be anything you want, and some methods may be more efficient than others, but in all cases the amount of energy used to split the hydrogen from water will be greater than that recaptured when recombining the hydrogen and oxygen to form water once again. When it comes to thermodynamics, there really is no free lunch... although some lunches may be more efficient and cleaner than others.

quote:

"It is very easy to sequester carbon from a natural gas catlytic reaction, it comes out as a solid."

This actually depends on the process used. The most common industrial method, steam reforming of methane, actually releases heated carbon dioxide (and carbon monoxide) in much the same way combustion does. There are other methods, but they presently aren't as cost effective.

quote:

"Hydrogen will not be used in cars first, that makes little sense.  Stationary and portable power generation will come first.  Exposing the system to extreme temperature variations and banging it around the roads will cause all sorts of problems."

I have to disagree. With the exception of a relatively limited number of plants to improve grid supply and demand balance, and thus efficiency, I don't see fuel cells being used as stationary generators any time soon. Using hydrogen from hydrocarbons doesn't provide enough of an increase in efficiency to be economical (especially as the production infrastructure would have to be expanded) and, as I hope I've made clear, hydrogen from water is not an energy source. As portable generators, fuel cells may see some use (clean, quiet, and efficient may be worth the extra cost to many portable users), but this amounts to only a small fraction of energy consumption.

As to reliability issues in cars, I think you are overstating the difficulties. Fuel cells have (almost) no moving parts, so they're actually quite resistant to failure from jostling. They even manage to survive shuttle launches, which entail a bit more than your typical road vibration (see: http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/shuttle/reference/shutref/orbiter/eps/pwrplants.html ). Fuel cells do have optimal operating temperature ranges, but these happen to overlap fairly well with ambient air temperatures and, if necessary, electrical heating elements can be used to bring the cell up to temperature. The methods already used to cool internal combustion engines can easily be modified to prevent fuel cell stacks from overheating. Apart from the lack of infrastructure and an ideal method of storing hydrogen, cars and fuel cells are actually a pretty good fit. The downside is really that the energy grid that would need to power them is still extremely dirty and inefficient. Other options, like hybrids, offer a more immediate fuel savings and are a better near-term investment of resources, in my opinion.

quote:

"A tank of hydrogen is no more dangerous than a tank of gasoline in a wreck."

This is certainly an argument, and one that has many advocates, Daimler-Chrysler among them, I believe. However I hold that, all else being equal, a highly compressed fuel (required to get reasonable range with hydrogen) is inherently more dangerous than one at atmospheric pressure. As you noted, hydrogen goes up, so a small puncture to the tank might actually be less dangerous than similar damage to a gasoline tank. It's more the case of a significant containment vessel rupture that worries me. In that case, the pressure will force hydrogen out into a cloud rapidly. The inevitable ignition and combustion of that cloud will result in a shock wave more damaging than your typical gasoline tank explosion. The military uses this technique of vapor cloud ignition in fuel/air explosives. For the basic idea see: http://www.fas.org/man/dod-101/sys/dumb/fae.htm . Perhaps something we could live with, but I'd prefer to give metal hydrides (or some other method) a bit more time.


< Message edited by shallowdeep -- 4/9/2007 12:18:56 PM >

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RE: Hydrogen as Fossil Fuel Clean Replacement - 4/9/2007 2:28:35 PM   
shallowdeep


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Sam,

Thanks. Nits about, or even well reasoned demolitions of, my posts are welcome. =)

After looking over your posts, it would seem we are (mostly) on the same page. In particular, I share your concern about the US losing the technological and industrial lead in developing and producing alternative energy sources. I'm also not sold on the hydrogen economy as a near-term solution, although I think it will be important in the future. However, I couldn't agree more that waiting on that "perfect" technology that's always just 5-10 years off is a terrible idea. (And hydrogen is only almost perfect as part of a larger system, anyway...) There are plenty of steps that can be taken right now to improve the energy situation. It's a high growth industry and I worry about the US missing out on the opportunities to be a leader. However, I'm also hopeful and not (I like to think) entirely without reason.

On to the nits:

Electrolysis is somewhat inefficient, but I think it's currently in the 50-70% range, which, if there is clean energy available, makes it a part of a viable energy storage/delivery mechanism.

Obviously, in the short term, any large scale rollout of hydrogen would need to make extensive use of hydrogen from hydrocarbons (mostly steam reforming of methane). Hydrogen from this source, while perhaps somewhat more efficient than the existing combustion reliant system (especially as a replacement for internal combustion engines), still has the same problems with carbon emissions and use of limited fossil fuels.

I see the real, long-term goal in energy policy as being a move to carbon emission free energy production and away from dependence on limited, and often politically volatile, fossil fuels. As such, I don't really view a hydrogen economy based on hydrogen synthesized from natural gas and/or coal as anything but an intermediate step, and an expensive one at that. With low-cost, immediate improvements available to fuel economy, in the form of hybrids and vehicle weight reductions, aggressively pursuing increased synthetic hydrogen production now seems like a misallocation of resources. It seems much better to be investing in a cleaner grid that replaces dirty, inefficient power plants with cleaner, new ones and relies increasingly on solar, wind and, more controversially (but, in my opinion, necessarily), nuclear power. Once that grid begins to fall into place, hydrogen will make more sense and hopefully there will have been some improvements in methods for transport, storage and electrolysis and fuel cell efficiency and cost by then.

I'm not terribly familiar with current combined cycle plants, but my understanding was the newest generation were operating at pretty close to 60% efficiency. A quick search shows that Siemens offers reference designs, on which some actual plants have already been built, designed to operate at 58.8% efficiency (see: http://www.powergeneration.siemens.com/en/plantrating/index.cfm?session=3775437x74029636 ). As a part of a next step to improving the grid, such plants seem quite promising.

I agree that flywheels are another very promising technology to damp demand fluctuations and limit wasted grid power.

(in reply to samboct)
Profile   Post #: 18
RE: Hydrogen as Fossil Fuel Clean Replacement - 4/9/2007 2:46:19 PM   
Tuomas


Posts: 242
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Still, no one has explained how he touched the torch without getting burned...

Other than that, I would just like to say this topic is awesome.

(in reply to shallowdeep)
Profile   Post #: 19
RE: Hydrogen as Fossil Fuel Clean Replacement - 4/9/2007 7:29:52 PM   
samboct


Posts: 1817
Joined: 1/17/2007
Status: offline
From Shallow -
"I have to disagree. With the exception of a relatively limited number of plants to improve grid supply and demand balance, and thus efficiency, I don't see fuel cells being used as stationary generators any time soon."

Umm, much of the current fuel cell market is for stationary power generation- generally for applications which can tolerate the high price of a fuel cell.  Think that they're fueled by natural gas- generally in sizes large enough to power an apartment building.

"As to reliability issues in cars, I think you are overstating the difficulties. Fuel cells have (almost) no moving parts, so they're actually quite resistant to failure from jostling. They even manage to survive shuttle launches, which entail a bit more than your typical road vibration (see: http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/shuttle/reference/shutref/orbiter/eps/pwrplants.html )."

Unfortunately, the vibration issue is not what seems to lead to failures of fuel cells- ruptured membranes, drying out, corrosion, etc do seem to be problematic though- depending on the fuel cell technology.

"Fuel cells do have optimal operating temperature ranges, but these happen to overlap fairly well with ambient air temperatures and, if necessary, electrical heating elements can be used to bring the cell up to temperature."

There are two major fuel cell technologies- proton exchange membrane (PEM) and solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC) that are widely touted.  Both have issues, so the current market leaders may be things like molten carbonate (stationary), and direct methanol (DMFC) but these technologies don't offer the performance (theoretically) of PEM and SOFC.

PEM is the only technology that runs close to ambient temperature-molten carbonate and SOFC run much hotter.  SOFC typically runs at 1000C, now dropping to 800C or so, with some not very efficient examples at 500C.  But SOFC is robust in terms of fuel source ( can use hydrogen with some sulfur contamination and other stuff. hydrogen not the only fuel) while PEM really needs very clean hydrogen.  (Don't remember about DMFC which is popular in Europe.  Think the website is www.fuelcell.org.

Be careful around the nuclear issue- the industry spends $Bs/yr- and hasn't seen a profit in a long time.  There's a lot vested in the idea that nuclear will ride to our salvation, but these arguments often were made well before the rise of solar and wind- which continue to get cheaper.  Countries such as Sweden are mothballing or canceling nuclear projects in favor of wind.  I haven't seen anything compelling for nuclear, just lots of very expensive marketing and designing (and some installations in Asia to be fair).  Furthermore- a more efficient grid certainly reduces the need for nuclear since it's only relevant in very high demand areas.   In more dispersed areas, smaller grids and matching the environment to technology will pay off.

Regards,

Sam

(in reply to Tuomas)
Profile   Post #: 20
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