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Technology

Consumer Hydrogen Fuel Cells 518

axis-techno-geek writes: "Ballard Power Systems of Vancouver, BC (in Canada, eh), has stated that it will start production this friday of their consumer level Nexa(tm) hydrogen fuel cell (article here). The power module generates up to 1200 watts of unregulated DC electrical power that can keep going as long as it is supplied with hydrogen, and produces no toxic by-products (i.e. you can use it in your home). They also have plans for a 250kW unit. No price as of yet."
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Consumer Hydrogen Fuel Cells

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  • Great for RV's (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Garak ( 100517 ) <chris@nOspaM.insec.ca> on Friday September 28, 2001 @05:19PM (#2365758) Homepage Journal
    Thats just the right size for RV's. Lots of power their to run a computer, tv, and a few lights.
    • by crisco ( 4669 )
      Nothing like going camping and some fool at the next campsite has to catch her Friends reruns (or read /.) at 9PM so he's got the generator running full tilt. I want to drink beer, slap mosquitos and keep moving away from the campfire smoke in peace and quiet, thank you very much. Guess I should be backpacking, but it's hard to bring enough beer and still have room for the tent.
    • Screw that. I'll be using them for remotely telemetered scientific equipment. It's a dream come true. No more having to rely on batteries (Which generally go bad if you let them run dead. I hate buying new batteries.) No more solar panels. Just stick a big 'ol bottle of hydrogen on a big 'ol fuel cell, and let er go. Just visity every month to pick up the data and change the hydrogen if necessary. Power systems are always the weak link, and the vagaries of the sun, and the inherent weak natures of batteries are the worst part of it. As for cost.... for most big scientific experiments, you're paying 100 of thousands of dollars, I think several thousand+ for reliable and reusable energy sources should be negligible.

      Trust me, there are many many applications that have been hotly anticipating this that have nothing to do with cars or RVs.
  • Yes, but (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Jailbrekr ( 73837 ) <jailbrekr@digitaladdiction.net> on Friday September 28, 2001 @05:21PM (#2365763) Homepage
    Any word on hydrogen storage? How dangerous is it?

    I worked 2 blocks away from one of their offices in Burnaby, and always wondered how they were storing the hydrogen in those test buses that circled the industrial complex......
    • NOT dangerous.. (Score:5, Informative)

      by mindstrm ( 20013 ) on Friday September 28, 2001 @05:31PM (#2365825)
      Yes, Hydrogen can burn, when it reaches appropriate fuel/air mixture.. just like many other chemicals.

      Propane or Natural gas are more dangerous than hydrogen.

      Everyone thinks hydrogen is severely dangerous because of the Hindenberg disaster... which modern science attributes NOT to the hydrogen in the blimp.. but to the canvas covering of the ship that was, unbeknownst to them at the time, coated in a reflective paint made of SOLID ROCKET FUEL (they did not know that aluminum-oxide and some other chemicals were explosive)
      The hindenberg got screwed up because a spark ignited the coating... which quickly spread across the whole ship.

      Another fact.. people report seeing huge orange flames billowing from it.. but hydrogen burns as an almost invisible blue flame.... of course, the hydrogen added to the fire... but wasn't the cause.
      • Re:NOT dangerous.. (Score:3, Interesting)

        by mikers ( 137971 )
        The hydrogen can be generated (as the article says) locally. Since hydrogen tends to leave any container because its molecules are so small... storing it doesn't make sense for any length of time.

        If hydrogen is generated locally (by stripping hydrogen from say methanol, ethanol, or gasoline) and feed directly into the cell, all the hydrogen storage you have to worry about is your little buffer between the hydrogen generator and the fuel cell (likely a very short tube).

        No need to store large amounts of a gas that just won't stay in any container.

      • The big gushing flames one see from the burning LZ-129 (Hindenburg) come from the diesel fuel(Yes, that mother was diesel-powered)...
      • What you say is tantamount to an urban myth. The funny thing is that it's one of those urban myths that shouldn't have got anywhere because it completely obviously false.


        Last time I attended a hydrogen balloon explosion it was about 1m across. The bang was audible across many miles and it was fucking dangerous. (It certainly brought the police running and some fast talking was needed). This balloon wasn't made from solid rocket fuel but rubber. It's not hard to guess what might happen if you multiply this by a few million and suspend a bunch of people from its underside.


        Of course the colour of the flame was influenced largely by the colour of the skin burning. Haven't you ever thrown metal filings into a flame? It only takes a tiny amount to produce a brilliant colour. A gigantic bag made of just about any material and containing hydrogen in an environment where static is possible would be dangerous.


        Whether hydrogen is safer than propane is irrelevant. I wouldn't strap myself to the underside of a very large balloon filled with that gas either.

        • Well.. (Score:3, Informative)

          by mindstrm ( 20013 )
          The hour long episode on Discovery seemed rather concise and definite. They tested a sample of the hindenberg covering.. they checked the formula used... etc.

          It's not an urban myth.

          As for diesel.. the diesel fuel is at the *bottom* of the ship.. nowehre near where the huge, orange flames were shooting from.

          I'm not saying Hydrogen can't explode.. it certainly does. But the Hindenberg didn't explode. It burned.
        • Re:NOT dangerous.. (Score:4, Informative)

          by Hanzie ( 16075 ) on Friday September 28, 2001 @07:23PM (#2366329)
          Sounds like the balloon was actually filled with an Oxy/hydrogen mixture.

          I was present at an H2 balloon burning demonstration at Idaho State University a short time ago. The one filled with pure H2 went whoosh!, and a pretty mushroom cloud went up to the ceiling.

          The prof then announced the next one was filled with a proper mixture of H2 and 02. I covered my ears, and felt the overpressure 35 feet away. My ears rang, even though my fingers were in them.

          I think that's what you experienced.

          Had the LZ-129 been filled with an oxy-hydrogen mixture, there would have been no flames, just a big hole in the lakehurst field.
      • I read somewhere recently that most of the hydrogen in the Hindenberg probably floated straight up (being lighter than air) before it could burn once it had a hole through which to escape.
  • Unfortunately the hydrogen problem's not solved yet... Would people feel OK if they've got a highly flammable and explosive gas cannister in their home?

    Oh well, think of the pretty lights it can make if you bomb a neigbourhood filled with a couple of them...

    • by Junks Jerzey ( 54586 ) on Friday September 28, 2001 @05:32PM (#2365831)
      Unfortunately the hydrogen problem's not solved yet... Would people feel OK if they've got a highly flammable and explosive gas cannister in their home?

      You mean as oppposed to having natural gas piped into their home that would fill the house with gas if the pilot light just happened to go out while you on vacation? Tens of millions of families are living with this every day.
      • You mean as oppposed to having natural gas piped into their home that would fill the house with gas if the pilot light just happened to go out while you on vacation?

        Most pilot lights on gas appliances have a thermocouple that will shut off the gas supply if the flame goes out.

        Of course the last gas stove i used didn't seem to have this feature (though it was quite old)...
    • by Walter Wart ( 181556 ) on Friday September 28, 2001 @05:32PM (#2365834) Homepage
      It's really not bad, certainly less dangerous and less explosive than the propane tanks and natural gas we have learned to accept. Much less so than tanks full of gasoline.

      The most famous evidence of the unacceptable dangers of hydrogen was the Hindenburg explosion. A close look at the film shows some interesting results. The hydrogen went up (literally). The huge fire was caused by the diesel from the engines burning.

      Then too, you have to consider "normal accidents" as well as the flashier exceptional ones. Burning hydrocarbons produce things link carbon monoxide. Not good. Very poisonous. Very insidious. Burning hydrogen produces water vapor. Much less nasty.

      Of course, if you get your hydrogen by electrolyzing water and use electricity from burning fossil fuels you are still producing unpleasant stuff. But smokestacks are easier to track down and fit with scrubbers and other anti-pollution devices.
    • Hydrogen is no more dangerous... probably LESS dangerous than a normal fuel tank or propane tank or.. the gas pipe coming in to your house.
      It is NOT a higly volatile chemical... it just burns when it reaches the correct fuel/air mixture, like anything else.

      Why do people think hydrogen is so dangerous?
      • "Why do people think hydrogen is so dangerous?"

        Probably because they don't understand that a hydrogen bomb doesn't work by a conventional explosion of hydrogen. They just have the words "hydrogen" and "bomb" linked together in the back of their minds.

    • by Daffy Duck ( 17350 ) on Friday September 28, 2001 @05:36PM (#2365856) Homepage
      Well, lots of people have propane tanks in the house without much fear of cataclysm, so I don't think that's a concern. Surely the appropriate safety measures will be taken on tanks.

      The short-term question is where are people going to get the hydrogen from? That infrastructure's not in place yet.

      I think one scenario that would make this thing particularly kick-ass right away is this: if the generator is to be used just for backup and emergencies - i.e. it will be idle most of the time - then you could slowly generate your own hydrogen at home from tap water and a solar-powered hydrolysis rig. FREE! Take that, Exxon.

    • Would people feel OK if they've got a highly flammable and explosive gas cannister in their home?

      Or how about their pockets?

      Think about that next time you stick that disposable lighter full of compressed butane in your front pocket, inches the family jewels.

  • by PopeAlien ( 164869 ) on Friday September 28, 2001 @05:24PM (#2365782) Homepage Journal
    They have prototype buses running fuel cells - They look a bit like hunchback buses, but they don't reek of diesel! Seems like good timing, perhaps we can ween ourselves off the internal combustion engine without resorting to huge battery packs [popealien.com]
    • Back in 1996 as part of a technological entrepreneurship program for students. (The program was put out by the Canadian Institude for Technological Advancement, for which I cannot find a link.)

      The bus engine, powered by fuel cells, was very quiet. Fuel cells themselves have no moving parts so they don't make much noise.

      When riding that bus the loudest part of the journey were the air brakes.

      I've seen a number of comments pointing out the noise of this generator: 72 dB at 1 meter. A car is about that at 20 meters, so what they're really saying is that this generator is as noisy at 1 meter as a car is at 20 meters.
  • distributed power (Score:5, Insightful)

    by rakerman ( 409507 ) on Friday September 28, 2001 @05:24PM (#2365785) Homepage Journal
    I think there is an enormous opportunity for North America to move to a distributed power system. Imagine this: natural gas feeds into your basement fuel cell, where you generate electricity for your entire house, plus you crack some of the natural gas into hydrogen during the day, to fill up your fuel cell car when you connect it overnight. Wired's article The Energy Web [wired.com] has similar ideas (and an opening paragraph that is now quite eerie).
    • True, and you could get free hot water to replace the hot water heater, depending on which type of fuel cell you were using. ;)
    • I think there is an enormous opportunity for North America to move to a distributed power system. Imagine this: natural gas feeds into your basement fuel cell

      The problem being, of course, that we would simply be exchanging a centralized power system with a centralized natural gas system. I suppose those of us lucky enough to have access to our own deposits will do well, though.

      Your other points are good, though. This technology could be the equivalent of a very high-capacity battery. It'll also be a whole lot quieter than a gasoline generator, although the fuels are a bit less convenient.

    • Re:distributed power (Score:2, Interesting)

      by J4 ( 449 )
      Better still imagine this... Put these puppies on every closed landfill and run them off the methane. Staten Island could power a good portion of NYC for the next 100 yrs.
    • Even better, you can use solar cells to split water and/or natural gas in to some H2.
    • The advantage of Hydrogen as a by-product of water is that it does _not_ require derivatives of fossile fuels, thus not polluting. Using natural gas kind of destroys that principle. Much easier and cost effective to buy some distilled water and use solar energy to split it, store the hygrogen for the night. + you get no carbon residue or emissions.
  • by Damiano ( 113039 ) on Friday September 28, 2001 @05:26PM (#2365794)
    For those insterested, here's a link to a more technical article on Hydrogen Fuel Cells:

    http://www.altenergy.org/2/renewables/hydrogen_a nd _fuel_cells/hydrogen_and_fuel_cells.html
  • Great! (Score:4, Funny)

    by Rhinobird ( 151521 ) on Friday September 28, 2001 @05:28PM (#2365800) Homepage

    "You'll see it under Christmas trees or powering your Christmas trees by the end of the year," Ballard's Harris said.



    Great, now all packaging will read "Hydrogen not included"



  • Unregulated? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by TheSHAD0W ( 258774 ) on Friday September 28, 2001 @05:29PM (#2365812) Homepage
    So how would you go about building, say, a 120V inverter to run off this gizmo without wasting too much energy or winding up with voltage stability problems on the output? Switching power supply to generate a fixed DC from the unregulated DC?
    • So how would you go about building, say, a 120V inverter to run off this gizmo without wasting too much energy or winding up with voltage stability problems on the output? Switching power supply to generate a fixed DC from the unregulated DC?

      The voltage output of a fuel cell is determined by electrochemical effects (like a battery), so it should be very stable.

      Turning it into AC is easy ($5 worth of electronics from the local hobby store). Add another $5 and about a pound of iron for the inductors if you want it to be filtered into a nice smooth sine wave (otherwise it'll be a square wave, and many electronic devices object to this).
  • by A Commentor ( 459578 ) on Friday September 28, 2001 @05:30PM (#2365816) Homepage
    The power module generates up to 1200 watts of unregulated DC electrical power that can keep going as long as it is supplied with hydrogen


    If that is the case why do they list a 'Lifetime' of 1500 hours? That's only ~62 days.. definitely not as long as it is supplied with hydrogen
    • Everything has a design lifetime. Parts wear out. It's a fact of life. I admit, for an expensive item such as this, I would want a longer lifetime before investing in it. Hopefully, they can improve this in future products.

      From their statement, however, one can assume that the unit doesn't need to be cycled on and off to prevent overheating or anything like that.

      Hmm. I wonder what the operating lifetime of a small (1.2kW) gasoline generator is?
  • by pbryan ( 83482 ) <email@pbryan.net> on Friday September 28, 2001 @05:30PM (#2365817) Homepage
    Hydrogen seems like a neat way to store and transfer energy. It's a pure, simple, easy to transport, easy to extract form of energy.

    However, there are number of issues that makes the short-term outlook for hydrogen difficult to justify running out and buying your own fuel cell...

    In order to manufacture hydrogen in any meaningful quantity, "toxic" (environmentalist definition) by-products are an inevitable. To wit:

    1. Electrolytic conversion from water requires electricity. The vast amount of electricity generated comes from icky dirty coal.

    2. Extraction of hydrogen from fossil fuels still generates some toxic pollutants, and is still in relatively early stages of development.

    No matter how meaningful quantities hydrogen are generated, greenheads will hate the fact that mother earth will incur vast amounts of greenhouse gases.
    Shall we address the infrastructure problems associated with hydrogen? The costs of retooling fuel distribution channels to handle hydrogen?

    Another issue conveniently ignored is the storage of hydrogen. Hydrogen, in its current form, is not particularly dense, requiring large tanks to store the equivalent energy stored in fossil fuels.

    In the future, wind and/or solar power could provide the greenhouse gas-free hydrogen generation alternative to make it a sound fuel source from an environmentalist standpoint.

    Advances in storage mediums, extraction and distribution should one day make hydrogen an exceptional fuel.

    • Electrolytic conversion from water requires electricity. The vast amount of electricity generated comes from icky dirty coal.

      You are unfortunately correct about this. It looks like economic realities will make coal the U.S. fuel of choice for a long time to come.

      Extraction of hydrogen from fossil fuels still generates some toxic pollutants, and is still in relatively early stages of development.

      It's still less pollution than combustion causes. Not ideal, but it's a step in a better direction.

      Shall we address the infrastructure problems associated with hydrogen? The costs of retooling fuel distribution channels to handle hydrogen?

      Long distance electrical lines currently lose approximately 1/3 of their energy before they reach our neighborhoods. Part of the allure of fuel cells is the ability to run local generators that will run a lot more efficient. Distribution is certainly an issue, but it seems as feasible to send out tankers filled with liquid hydrogen as it is to send out gasoline tanker trucks.

    • by Christopher Thomas ( 11717 ) on Friday September 28, 2001 @06:15PM (#2366050)
      No matter how meaningful quantities hydrogen are generated, greenheads will hate the fact that mother earth will incur vast amounts of greenhouse gases. Shall we address the infrastructure problems associated with hydrogen? The costs of retooling fuel distribution channels to handle hydrogen?

      The advantage to switching to hydrogen or another easily-synthesized fuel like methanol is that it centralizes the power generation, allowing you to switch to a different system (solar, nuclear, hamster wheels, or what-have-you) without requiring another upgrade to all of the cars and service stations on a continent. This is a very respectable accomplishment.

      You can also generally install better scrubbers on a coal power plant than on a car, even before you start switching to alternate power sources.

      Another issue conveniently ignored is the storage of hydrogen. Hydrogen, in its current form, is not particularly dense, requiring large tanks to store the equivalent energy stored in fossil fuels.

      That's why I like the idea of using methanol as a fuel. You could handle it in existing service stations without too much refitting, and you could burn it in a conventional internal combustion engine (though you'd probably want a ceramic engine to avoid corrosion over time). Fuel cells can process it too, though with greater difficulty. Methanol's boiling point is low enough that you'd have to store it under pressure, like propane, but this isn't too difficult (we already have the infrastructure for it for propane).

      Methanol can be produced by fermenting plants if you're desperate, or produced by direct synthesis if you have a source of power, hydrogen, and CO2 handy. Plunk a fuel plant next to a big city, and you have all three (water, exhaust, and the local power plant).

      This gives us the advantages of a hydrocarbon fuel without having to short-circuit the carbon cycle or depend on exhaustible fossil fuel deposits.

      Of course, we'll only really switch when fossil fuels become scarce enough to make this cost-effective.
    • Re your comments on extraction from water or fossil fuels:
      (A) No one in their right minds would electrolyse water to get hydrogen. You might as well keep the electricity, except for very specialized applications.
      (B) Cracking and carbon sequestration work pretty well, without any of the "icky toxic pollutants". You end up with solid carbon compounds. (Well, maybe they don't work "pretty" well yet...) Alternatively, use green plants, use ethanol, use those corn fields in Iowa! :)

    • by twitter ( 104583 ) on Friday September 28, 2001 @06:24PM (#2366089) Homepage Journal
      In the future, wind and/or solar power could provide the greenhouse gas-free hydrogen generation alternative to make it a sound fuel source from an environmentalist standpoint.

      Not true! Solar panels are currently nasty silicon things made with all sorts of toxins. That would be OK if they would last forever, but they are generally on the five year plan. Mirror/boiler schemes show more promise, but scraping togeter megawats from 22 watts per square meter is not easy and pilots worry they will be blinded flying over them! Do you want to get into the specifics of making and maintaining the millions of ugly little windmills that are needed to make windpower practical? Multiply your estimates to account for the fact that the wind generally blows when people don't need extra electricity. Do you really want to cut down trees to set up the farms? You did not mention biomass conversion as an indirect solar, but corn was made for eating! Cost = prohibitive on all of these options, so far about 10x the cost of normal generation.

      The environmental future is in nuclear. No greenhouse and managable waste all nice and concentrated in a few very large plants. The infrastructure is in place for transmition, so no new scars are needed. The technology is well understood and the safety record is enviable.

      • by Boulder Geek ( 137307 ) <archer@goldenagewireless.net> on Friday September 28, 2001 @07:13PM (#2366281)
        Not true! Solar panels are currently nasty silicon things made with all sorts of toxins. That would be OK if they would last forever, but they are generally on the five year plan.

        Modern solar panels have 20 year warrantees.

        Mirror/boiler schemes show more promise, but scraping togeter megawats from 22 watts per square meter is not easy and pilots worry they will be blinded flying over them!

        The solar energy density at the Earth's surface is approximately 1000W/m^2, not 22W/m^2. The latter figure is for a particularly inefficient solar panel, say one from 20+ years ago.

        Flying over a mirror/boiler facility shouldn't be much of an issue, because the mirrors are pointed at the boiler, not straight up.

        You did not mention biomass conversion as an indirect solar, but corn was made for eating!

        Thousands of tons of organic matter suitable for generating methanol or methane are produced and collected in our cities every day in the form of sewage and food waste. All we have to do is collect it.

      • by dachshund ( 300733 ) on Friday September 28, 2001 @07:18PM (#2366303)
        Do you want to get into the specifics of making and maintaining the millions of ugly little windmills that are needed to make windpower practical?

        The ugly little windmills of the late 70s and 80s are history (although some of the little buggers are still spinning.) Modern windmills are enormous, with blades the size of a 747's wingspan. New models can generate 2.5 Megawatts, but that's by no means a limit (output has jumped by 100-fold in the past 15 years.)

        It'd still take a lot of those turbines to replace a nuclear power plant. On the other hand, there's a lot of development to be done (and lots of space in this country and offshore.) By the time we've finished building the next generation of nuclear plants, turbine output and efficiency will have increased significantly. When we're trying to figure out what to do with the first trainloads of waste, most non-nuclear countries will be building turbines and be generating power without fuel.

        As to the ugliness... Well, I think they look pretty nice, actually. And if you've ever driven through the Great Plains, you'll probably agree that a few windmills aren't going to get in anyone's way.

      • by BillyGoatThree ( 324006 ) on Friday September 28, 2001 @09:53PM (#2366775)
        "Solar panels are currently nasty silicon things made with all sorts of toxins. That would be OK if they would last forever, but they are generally on the five year plan."

        If you buy a solar panel new from a reputable manufacturer (say, Siemens) it will come with at least a 20 year warranty. That is, they will replace it if it falls 10% below it's rated wattage output any time within 20 years. And they pretty much picked "20" out of the air since they have no idea how long they'll last--all they're sure of is that it'll be more than 20 years.

        Furthermore, depending on where you install it (Arizona vs Maine, say) it will produce the same amount of power required to build it in 2-7 years. In other words, however much toxins it puts out, it can clean them up before it's half-dead. A net gain. These are actual working numbers, not theory.

        Solar power at ground level approx 1kW/m^2. Market available panels are 15-20% efficient which is 150-200W/m^2, not 22. And laboratory panels have been pumped up to 30% which would be 300W.

        I'm not some whacko greenie that thinks nuclear power will kill us all. I'm just somebody that adheres to the KISS principle: the sun is already generating billions of times more power than we could ever use--why not tap into it with a simple collector rather than reinventing the wheel here on earth?
    • No matter how meaningful quantities hydrogen are generated, greenheads will hate the fact that mother earth will incur vast amounts of greenhouse gases.

      True. However, it changes the nature of the problem. H2 cells development must go hand in hand with development of greenhouse gas/waste containment.

      Or, even, use nuclear energy to make H2 fuel cells. Nukes makes lots of radiative stuff, but the bad stuff is in one nice chunk, not spread out in the atmosphere like the CO2 crap our cars spew out.

  • Ho hum.. (Score:2, Insightful)

    by cmowire ( 254489 )
    This isn't the first time that there have been people trying to sell fuel cells to the public. Every year or so, Popular Science or Popular Mechanics will hype somebody's fuel cells. One year it's a hydrogen-powered camcorder or laptop battery system, so you can have longer lifespans. The next, it's a fuel cell car. The next, something else.

    The problem is that they are a few months too late. California power, more or less, has stabalized. That would have been a great market for them to edge into.

    I mean, really. I think fuel cells are a great idea. But where are you going to easily get the hydrogen? Sure, you can get a tank from the welding supply store, but you can get gas from any gas station and Compressed Natural Gas from most gas stations. There aren't any hydrogen pipelines to hook up to, like there are natural gas pipelines.

    The real good model is a larger one that can produce substantial amounts of power off of a natural gas line. It just has to fit into a small trailer. You could solve a California-style power crunch (at least, until the Natural Gas lines run out of capacity) by parking a bunch of those all throughout the cities. Nobody gets up in arms about a power plant in their backyard because they don't even know it's there.
    And remember, this is another stock listed on the famed Vancouver exchange. This is the same exchange where that company traded for 2 years before the founders realized that the company had no product and the demo was smoke-and-mirrors. ;)
  • Hydrogen Economy (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Dutchmaan ( 442553 )
    Now that I've read stories that they can grow algae in the dark feeding on glucose, as well as use it to exhale hydrogen naturally.. I'm starting to see large vats of algae producing hyrogen for use in fuel cells on a commercial level...

    Personally, I give it 10-15 years before fuel cells start hitting the markets in force.
  • Also more info (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Erasei ( 315737 ) on Friday September 28, 2001 @05:33PM (#2365838) Homepage
    Here is another link about how hydrogen full cells work. http://www.georgetown.edu/sfs/programs/stia/studen ts/osgood.htm [georgetown.edu]
  • by Alien54 ( 180860 ) on Friday September 28, 2001 @05:33PM (#2365841) Journal
    There are reports that Bin Ladens short term strategic goals include the over throw of the possibly unstable House of Saud. This would give him something really big to use to mess with the west.

    The long term solution would be to wean the USA off of an economy dependant of international oil supplies.

    While many oil and energy companies may want to retain control of their assets in the area, solutions such as Fuel Cells may ultimately be the most elegant solution to the situation.

    Fine, if they want to be poor, we can let them be poor.

    This is something that I think the Bush Administration should go after Hard. Unfortunately, he may have some conflicts of interest given the support he has received from these very same oil companies.

  • by tbmaddux ( 145207 ) on Friday September 28, 2001 @05:33PM (#2365846) Homepage Journal
    From the original article: "...the company sees a future for the products as the world looks for alternative energy sources to reduce reliance on oil and natural gas." and "zero-emission fuel cells combine hydrogen - which can be obtained from methanol, natural gas, petroleum or renewable sources..."

    A fuel cell is only truly zero-emission if it is catalyzing hydrogen gas from zero-emission sources. 95% of our current supply of hydrogen comes from natural gas. [h2fuelcells.org] So currently the fuel cell is only as clean as the natural gas reforming plant, effectively "burning" that gas and releasing CO2.

    They're a great idea, but they're not zero-emission yet.

  • by maggard ( 5579 ) <michael@michaelmaggard.com> on Friday September 28, 2001 @05:36PM (#2365859) Homepage Journal
    Coupla basic points:

    • The fuel cells are fueled from "... methanol, natural gas, petroleum or renewable sources." That means this isn't some magic battery one can plug in anywhere.
    • The price has not been announced but it's predicted to be high, possibly very high. Also nobody has said anything yet about TCO - how much regular maintenance will this require, what about consumables, what's the duty cycle and what's the lifetime.
    • These are competing with established power generating systems. It has the advantage the it's not producing anything directly toxic (though I wonder about the various nasties already in it's fuel, it's not like the sulphers and all just go poof) but same as they it requires an infrastructure.
    • Local codes will have to be updated to recognize these, insurance companies will need to set premiums, fueling and venting and all of the other standards and bits of bureaucracy will need to be done. You may well be able to buy one of these reasonably soon, just not use it legitimately.
    • On the other hand (and this is a common myth where folks always bring up the Hindenburg) hydrogen isn't inherently any more dangerous then any other energy-rich fuel. Indeed it's probably slightly safer as it's lighter then air and so doesn't "pool" and become concentrated.

    • This will be great for isolated cabins and hunting camps. If it can run off propane, many are already set up. Ah, quit electricty in the woods. Lots of folks at the Nuclear power plant I work at like the idea.

      It's not a good idea for cities, apartment buildings and other small institutions. The smaller units, made by GE, do not yet provide electricity cheaper than can be bought right off the grid without any of the infrastructure and maintenance hastles you mention. If it works small scale, it's generally cheaper large scale and you should expect 500MW combined cycle cells compete with gas turbine setups of similar size. From a long term resource standpoint, however, burning petrol instead of making plasics is kind of like burning trees for heat instead of making furniture.

      On the other hand (and this is a common myth where folks always bring up the Hindenburg) hydrogen isn't inherently any more dangerous then any other energy-rich fuel. Indeed it's probably slightly safer as it's lighter then air and so doesn't "pool" and become concentrated.

      Hydrogen is a pain in the ass. It takes electricty or radiation to make, so it can only be used as an energy storage. In it's cryrogenic form, it's difficult to handle in reasonable quantities. Every single line has rupture disks in case the vacuum line insulation fails. Nature abhors a vacuum, and unrelieved pipe full of boiling liquid hydrogen is a pipe bomb. Despite your fond wishes of dipersal, large quantites of cryroginic hydrogen tend to FALL back to the ground untill it warms up. Warming up by ignition is a possibility that no one likes to think about. When you compare this to the ease of handeling gasoline, natural gas or even propane, you can see how much more expensive it is to deal with.

      These days the cheapest and best solution is not always the one that wins out. Manufacturers would love being able to sell millions of these things as well as the service plans to keep them up.

  • BMW has a working design for a 7-series powered by a 5.4 litre V12. It's called the 750hL [bmwworld.com].

    Looks like science can be profitable and fun after all.

  • Joe Cell (Score:2, Funny)

    by shpoffo ( 114124 )
    Neat, but i'll wait until i can run my car on somethign more akin to a Joe Cell [colsweb.com]

    -shpoffo

  • Didn't Chrysler vow to have a fuel-cell-powered car in production by the mid 2000's? Any information on how that project is progressing?

    • by aqua ( 3874 )
      The big three automakers all made claims of that nature while trying to fight off alternative fuels legislation (which included a phased plan from LEV to ULEV to ZEV) in the 1990s -- they claimed the technology wasn't ready even for second-car usage (the car someone would use when they knew they were going on a short trip around town).

      Arguably it wasn't, but GM used one of its own prototype electric cars as a political lever on the technological readiness issue -- claiming it couldn't manage even a hundred miles on a charge, etc. They'd contracted Ballard to build the cells; Ballard built a battery pack that could manage more than twice what GM was claiming to Congress (around 200mi), but GM's contract allowed GM to suppress the information, ultimately forcing California to roll back state legislation on ZEVs (10% of all sales by the early 2000s, IIRC).

      Source: Taken for a Ride [amazon.com], by Jack Doyle. Sorry if I've misremembered the details, but that's the general picture.

      • Just what we need is a bunch of people speeding around in a rain storm in their electric cars...

        packed with lithium and sodium batteries.

        I wonder how big a hole 50lbs of lithium makes...

        pan
  • Or does it cost more electricity to break down H20 than it generates?

    (Thinks back to the day in chemistry class when he used an electrical current to break down water...)

    At any rate, this is outstanding, especially if it can be converted to run water. No more worrying about keeping gas for that generator during a floor or storm. Just stick a siphon pump or a funnell out the window.
  • by ryanw ( 131814 ) on Friday September 28, 2001 @05:44PM (#2365905)
    This is on topic... trust me! =)

    The other day I heard the best suggestion yet on what we should do to "pay back" for what they did to on Sept. 11, 2001. We should invest the billions of dollars into products like this hydrogen fuel cell for our cars, and us breaking away from using OIL products/bi-products in our everyday transportation instead of spending billions in bombing a few people.

    This way we get rid of the mid eastern funds of doing terrorists attacks and make the U.S. self sufficiant and able to use our own oil for the rest of our needs and not be dependant on other nations for anything.

    Invest in the U.S.A. and running them out of their money.
  • Between this technology and LED lighting [space.com], cultivators of certain brain-change vegetables will have a much easier time staying out of jail. Let's see: low power, low heat waste, a renewable energy source...now all the world needs is for someone to invent robotic scissors for manicuring the finished product. Cheech and Chong meets Mr. Science!

  • Which are also by the way the so called "hydrogen economy" still hasn't been created: 1) there is still no relatively inexpensive and safe way to store hydrogen at the consumer level, and 2) producing H2 from water doesn't make sense in terms of the economics: for liquid or gaseous fuels it is still much more energy efficient to convert ag wastes or coal to synthetic gases and fuels than to produce pure hydrogen.

    Now then, if you really wanted to get me excited.... you'd be talking about a consumer grade 5 Kw or so Fuel cell that could operate with good efficiency using a high grade of Bio-diesel [biodiesel.org]. Which BTW can be made from virtually any vegetable oil or even oil derived from diatom algae. Of course, you'd have to learn to make your own fuel from the leftover peanut oil that the local burger joint cooked it's fries, in, but fortunately, the book with the recipe [veggievan.org] for how to do it isn't that hard to obtain...

  • Drinkable? (tangent) (Score:4, Interesting)

    by frantzdb ( 22281 ) on Friday September 28, 2001 @05:58PM (#2365982) Homepage
    I was just thinking about fule-cells this morning. I'm wondering, is the efflux drinkable?


    My train of thought:

    • Most city water is not what I would consider drinking water. It tastes nasty.
    • Filters are good but not perfect.
    • Bottled water is expensive and a pain in the butt.


    Then I thought: ``would there be a way to pipe drinking-quality water into the home?'' The answer, I think, is basicly no since you'd need to chlorinate to keep the miles of pipes from becomming a breeding ground.


    Then I thought: ``what about piping hydrogen to the house and making pure water there?''

    If people were to power their homes with hydrogen, then there would be a household source of pure hydrogen. Here's my question:
    Obviously if you have pure hydrogen and clean air going into a fule cell, you could possably get pure H2O out. Is this the case? and How much water is generated per KWh? (maby not enough for drinking water.)

    --Ben

    • Problems with your idea (sory)

      Try drinking distilled water from the store. It doesn't quite taste right because of the lack of mineral content. That's what you'd be drinking.

      On the other hand, they've been using the fuel cells to produce water for the space shuttle, so you can get used to it.
    • by ryanvm ( 247662 ) on Friday September 28, 2001 @06:23PM (#2366082)
      I'm wondering, is the efflux drinkable? [...] Obviously if you have pure hydrogen and clean air going into a fuel cell, you could possably get pure H2O out.

      I'm not sure whether or not a hydrogen fuel cell will produce pure H2O, but I do know that you wouldn't want to drink it.

      Although it isn't unhealthy, distilled water (pure H2O) tastes like shit. Your body is actually accustomed to the various minerals and whatnot that you'll find in most drinking water.

      Try a glass of it the next time you fill up your car's radiator - the distilled water, not the coolant!

    • by Anonymous Coed ( 8203 ) <planders@gmai l . c om> on Friday September 28, 2001 @06:26PM (#2366096)
      The problem with that is that there is no way for Them to put the mind-controlling flouride into the exhaust water of the fuel cell.
  • powerball.net (Score:5, Informative)

    by jms ( 11418 ) on Friday September 28, 2001 @06:00PM (#2365994)
    Many people are commenting about the difficulty of storing and transporting hydrogen gas. Here's a company with an interesting idea:

    powerball.net [powerball.net]

    Their idea is to use a low-pressure tank filled with water and "powerballs" -- small plastic covered spheres of sodium hydride.

    When the system wants to create more hydrogen gas, it uses a mechanical cutter to cut one of the powerballs in half. The sodium hydride instantly reacts with the water in the tank, producing sodium hydroxide and hydrogen (and a fair amount of heat):

    NaH + H2O --> NaOH + H2 gas

    When all of the sodium hydride spheres are used up, the result is a tank full of sodium hydroxide. The tank is then returned to their factory, where the sodium hydroxide is converted back into sodium hydride, so there's no waste stream from the process.

    The cool thing about this system is that the hydrogen is stored and transported in solid form -- as metal hydride spheres, so you don't have the danger of high-pressure hydrogen to work with. The hydrogen is generated as needed at low pressure.

    The site hasn't been updated in a while, so I have no idea if they've successfully brought a product to market, but I thought that this was a really interesting idea, and it would probably work fairly well with these sorts of fuel cells.
  • Location (Score:2, Funny)

    by SheldonYoung ( 25077 )
    Ballard Power Systems of Vancouver, BC (in Canada, eh),

    Technically they're in Burnaby and not in Vancouver. They just down the road from where I live. Nice industrial park. Walk the dog there often.

    They have some sort of noisy machinery behind one of their buildings that I haven't been able to figure out what it does. Probably some sort machinery the aliens gave them to build fuel cells.
  • I want a respiration fuel cell. Feed it sugar, water, and oxygen, and out pops carbon dioxide, energy, and crap - literally. If we humans can do it, why can't computers, damnit?
  • GE Homegen (Score:5, Informative)

    by jmichaelg ( 148257 ) on Friday September 28, 2001 @06:34PM (#2366138) Journal
    General Electric has been advertising a 7KW home fuel cell for over a year now at their homegen website [gepower.com] The unit is ostensibly being built for GE by Plug Power [plugpower.com] but apparently they've run into some difficulties. The product was supposed to be on market by this past summer - in fact New Jersey Power [njrpower.com] has been touting the fuel cell for delivery.

    Unfortunately, the latest word is next summer at the earliest. Plug Power reported a $30 mil loss as of their past fiscal year and their press releases talk more about financial transactions rather than actual sales or product delivery so things aren't looking all that great for GE or Plug Power's offering right now.

    What's worse for Plug Power is their initial offering doesn't take advantage of the fact that the fuel cell produces hot water as a waste product. Were they to design the unit to feed the hot water to a water heater, the fuel cell efficiency would be greater than 70%. Supposedly, the water capture feature won't appear until the second generation offering which makes you wonder who would buy the first one - especially at $15k a pop.

    By coincidence, Chevron Oil in San Ramon, CA fired up their 200 KW unit today for the first time. That puppy set them back $850,000 or around $4,250 per KW. More info is available at
    SF Chronicle [sfgate.com].

    Notice the odd ratios - The Chevron unit that's real and online cost about twice what GE's not-available unit is supposed to come in at. Maybe there's a hint there as to why Plug Power can't deliver.

  • Having never seen a fuel cell in person before... do they make any noise? If so, what do they sound like?
  • by mestreBimba ( 449437 ) on Friday September 28, 2001 @08:30PM (#2366536) Homepage
    GE will be marketing a fuel cell designed by PowerPlug next year. It uses natural gas or propane, and doubles as a space heater and water heater. These units are not any more dangerous to own or operate than a natural gas forced air heater.

    Some Specs Are:
    System Performance

    Natural Gas 40% @ 2 kW output
    Natural Gas 29% @ 7 kW output
    LP Gas 38% @ 2 kW output
    LP Gas 27% @ 7 kW output

    Cogen Efficiency >75%

    Fuel Cell Operating Temperature 160F
    Exhaust Temperature (simple cycle) 220F
    Power Quality IEEE 519 Compliant

    Emissions
    NOx 1 ppm
    SOx 1 ppm

    More info can be found at
    www.plugpower.com
  • by istartedi ( 132515 ) on Friday September 28, 2001 @11:04PM (#2366908) Journal

    1.2 kw isn't enough. Right now, I've got a 300W ps running in my box, a monitor, a 60W bulb and a TV (not sure about the TV wattage). Upstairs there is another TV running along with another 60W bulb. If the living room and master bedroom were occupied, and if we were doing laundry and drying clothes right now, I don't think the unit could handle it. I'm not sure exactly what our peak load is. Actually... let me wander over to the breaker box (afk) OK, it says 125 A max, 120-240V. I'm not sure if they mean that we can draw 125 A at 240V. I'm not sure if any of our appliances actually draw 240V.

    Anyhow, P=VI so if everything is 120 that's 15kW. IIRC from my power electronic courses the 120 is a RMS (Root Mean Square) voltage so you can use the P=VI equation as if it were DC.

    So, for the device to be practical to drive our 2 story house, it needs to output 15kW after being inverted.

    The other problem is that H2 is not readily available. Natural gas is piped right into our house, so here is my conclusion:

    If they manufacture a unit that can run on natural gas (integrated gas to H2 converter) and output 15kw after inversion they might have a residential market.

    At times when electricity from the grid is expensive or unavailable (e.g., California a few months ago) the ability to switch to such an alternative source could be an attractive selling point for a house.

    Of course in it's current configuration I'm sure it will find some applications, but if they can't penetrate the residential real estate market they are missing out on a major revenue stream. The several hundred kW unit sounds intriguing for a small town power station.

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