German Automakers Working On Hydrogen Fuel Cell Tech (arstechnica.com) 121
An anonymous reader writes: For the past several years, Japan has been trying to encourage development of hydrogen fuel cell technology for cars. Now it seems some German manufacturers are getting interested as well. "Audi used last week's North American International Auto Show in Detroit to debut its h-tron Quattro fuel cell SUV concept, and the UK's Autocar is reporting that Mercedes-Benz has green-lit for production a fuel cell version of its GLC SUV." The Audi vehicle has a range of roughly 600km. BMW has been working on this problem too: "For quite a while, the company was experimenting with internal combustion engines that used H2 instead of the traditional hydrocarbon fuel. More recently, it showed us an i8 and 5 Series powered by fuel cells, although neither is set for production."
Wow! Germans? (Score:2)
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Just be sure to test the fuel cells using ONLY the German tests. Independent tests may show different results.
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Oh totally. Someone hasn't been paying attention to the news. That someone is you.
Let me emphasis a part of the (anonymous) parent poster's post:
However, I don't think they do anything fundamentally different to other manufacturers in that regard.
Someone hasn't been paying attention to the reality (and to the various follow ups of the news you're mentioning). And *that* someone is *you*.
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Relative point of view. (Score:2)
If $X is provably corrupt.
AND group @Y to which $Y belong are all even more corrupt
THEN you can BOTH say that :
X - is corrupt (yes you're right).
and
Y - is the best (yes, the anonymous poster is right too, because the others are even worse).
In other words, as the saying goes: "In the land of the blind, the one-eyed man is king".
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VWs are known to be maintenance nightmares. They are a fucking mess.
Re: Wow! Germans? (Score:2)
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Do you know the first step in replacing the brake master cylinder in a new 'bug'?
Remove the front bumper. Seriously. Terrible cars designed to sell parts. Even Ford makes better cars.
Havent they been working on it for a while now? (Score:5, Informative)
Audi:
2004 - Audi A2H2-hybrid vehicle
2009 - Audi Q5-FCEV[1]
2014 - Audi A7 h-tron quattro
BMW:
2010 - BMW 1 Series Fuel-cell hybrid electric[2]
2012 - BMW_i8 fuel-cell prototype[3][4]
2015 - BMW 5-Series Grand Turismo fuel-cell prototype[5]
Daimler:
3 Mercedes-Benz F-Cells completed a 125-day around the world drive in 2011
1994 - Mercedes-Benz NECAR 1
1996 - Mercedes-Benz NECAR 2
1997 - Mercedes-Benz NECAR 3
1999 - Mercedes-Benz NECAR 4
2000 - Mercedes-Benz NECAR 5
2002 - Mercedes-Benz F-Cell based on the Mercedes-Benz A-Class
2005 - Mercedes-Benz F600 Hygenius
2009 - Mercedes-Benz F-CELL Roadster
2009 - Mercedes-Benz F-Cell based on the Mercedes-Benz B-Class[6]
2013 - Ford Motor Company, Daimler AG, Renault and Nissan Motor Co., Ltd. are expected to launch in 2017.
Volkswagen:
2000 - VW Bora Hy-motion-Fuel cell
2002 - VW Bora Hy-power-Fuel cell
2004 - VW Touran Hy-motion-Fuel cell
2007 - VW space up! blue
2008 - VW Passat Lingyu Hymotion[21]
2014 - VW Golf Hymotion
Thanks for the non story asshats
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Automakers seem to have recurring amnesia about what a terrible idea hydrogen-powered cars are (See this post. [slashdot.org]).
The cycle goes like this:
1. Develop hydrogen cars! They're totally the future you guys!
2. Realize they're a terrible idea surrounded by better alternatives.
3. Wait 5~15 years
4. Forget 2
5. GOTO 1
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I know, right? Tech. is pretty stagnant.
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I'm holding out for the fuel-cell powered Unimog.
Errrm ... yes, like they have been for 4 decades (Score:2)
News? Daimler-Benz has been doing this since the 70ies - at least.
Again? (Score:5, Interesting)
What's wrong with these automakers? Haven't they figured out by now that hydrogen is a total waste of time and effort? They tried this silliness back in the 90s and it went nowhere. It's a terrible fuel. It doesn't occur in nature like oil, so you have to use electricity to generate it (like by hydrolysis of water), and it's horrible for storage and handling because it's such a lightweight gas, unlike gasoline and diesel which are relatively easily-handled liquids; you have to have a highly pressurized tank to hold it, and leakage is a problem because hydrogen molecules are so small, so you're not going to get great range, and you've got a highly pressurized tank of highly combustible gas in your vehicle, which is a really bad thing if you have a crash.
The future is electric cars, not hydrogen, and the intermediate step is hybrids. Tesla has already proven EVs work great, and only need cheaper batteries to be practical for the commuting masses, and the Chevy Volt and Toyota Prius have proven that hybrids are practical now.
Re:Again? (Score:4, Insightful)
H2 fuel cells are being investigated as they are a way to get an electric car without the problems of a battery electric car. Battery electric cars still have the issue of long long charge times.
Re:Again? (Score:4, Insightful)
Plus, Teslas (for instance) are always dragging around an extra 1000lbs.
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You're going to be dragging around a 1000 lb. tank to get any useful range out of a hydrogen car if you want it to be remotely survivable in a crash.
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Imagine if the Hindenburg was filled with gasoline fumes. Everyone would've blown to tiny bits. In fact, most of the people aboard the Hindenburg survived.
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You're going to be dragging around a 1000 lb. tank to get any useful range out of a hydrogen car if you want it to be remotely survivable in a crash.
Check the curb weight of a Tesla Model S and the Honda Clarity FCV. Tesla is 1000lbs heavier.
Toyota shot their tank with a variety of weapons. It took an armor piercing round to get it to fail. And then the hydrogen simply leaked out.
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The Clarity is a smaller car. Shorter, not as wide, shorter wheelbase, seats only 4, not 5 like the Tesla. Less storage space. Not comparable at all.
Re: Again? (Score:2)
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Not quite. The H2 tanks are hefty, no arguing that, but the energy density of 700 bar Type III tanks is already far higher than the best Li-Po battery.
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Batteries don't need energy density that high. The conversion efficiency of H2 to torque isn't nearly as high as it is for battery-stored electricity in an induction motor.
Re: Again? (Score:2)
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10,000psi tanks in every car. What could go wrong?
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Tesla weighs between 4,647 to 4,830 lbs.
Mercedes S class between 4,707 to 4,806 lbs.
I guess that means that the Mercedes has 950 lbs back seat cup holders.
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If true, it just means Mercedes has forgotten what an S class is supposed to be.
Re: Again? (Score:2)
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All of which are Ss (Sport). If the lightest benz sports car weighs 4707 they have forgotten what a sports car is. I don't think so.
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Teslas can get 170 miles worth of charge in 30 minutes at their Superchargers. For people who take normal rest stops for meals and bathroom breaks, that's not a big problem. And with the huge range they have when fully charged, they have more than enough range for anyone who isn't doing a long road trip, meaning anyone who's a commuter or other normal car user can use them right now without worrying about range (then rent a gas car for road trips).
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Teslas can get 170 miles worth of charge in 30 minutes at their Superchargers..
FCVs are going twice that far and refuel in 4 minutes. The Teslas may be able to partially charge in 30 minutes, but what happens when all the charging stations are in use?
Re: Again? (Score:2)
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but what happens when all the charging stations are in use?
Has this ever happened?
Yes, it has. http://www.valuewalk.com/2016/... [valuewalk.com]
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Odd that they don't mention the wildfire that shut down 101, which caused traffic to be diverted to 5. So the higher traffic due to holiday travel was compounded by road closure.
http://www.theguardian.com/us-... [theguardian.com]
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I saw a couple electric chargers I didn't know about the other day. A couple people were chatting about it, one was remarking that the cars parked next to it were non electric.
That's the current state of the art, before hardly anyone is owning personal electric cars.
Might work in the stereotypical american town with square kilometers of parking lots but that's it.
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The charge times are a factor, but mostly it's cost, cost, cost!
Batteries are economically unsustainable: Li-ion batteries (the type with high energy density that you need in any battery vehicle) cost about 500 $/kWh. You can expect it to drop somewhat through the next decades, say to 300 in 2050, but they are already being mass-produced and unless a significant, revolutionary breakthrough happens, this technology has already delivered what it can.
Hydrogen storage, instead, costs about 12 $/kWh, much cheape
Re: Again? (Score:3)
Re: Again? (Score:3)
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Yes, they avoid the problems of batteries, but add the much worse problems with fuel cells and storing hydrogen. The charge time is quicker, but they are worse than batteries in most other ways.
The hydrogen economy is a scam (Score:3)
The cheapest way to produce large amounts of hydrogen is by hydrocarbon fractionation This process starts with, wait for it, natural gas. It also produces CO2 which is a powerful greenhouse gas.
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Yep. On top of that, you're using energy to create the hydrogen in the first place, then when you burn the hydrogen in a piston engine, you're limited to the Carnot efficiency, and again are wasting most of the energy as heat. So your overall system efficiency is going to be crap, even worse in fact than with gasoline.
At least with electric cars, the biggest source of inefficiency is the power plant itself, but there you have flexibility as you can use any power source, whether it's shitty, nasty coal, nu
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You're aware H2 vehicles react the hydrogen with oxygen in a fuel cell in a process that makes all other forms of electricity generation look horrible, right? You don't actually burn it. No, the biggest problem today with fuel cell is that they typically use something like platinum as a catalyst and there's physically not enough platinum in the world to convert the worlds vehicle fleet to fuel cell. If they can figure out a more common catalyst, and possibly a better way to make H2 that doesn't involve m
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Why not use the methane directly, then? Or turn it into methanol.
Re: The hydrogen economy is a scam (Score:2)
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Methanol would be for the ease of storage. Another "great" idea like that is to produce NH3 (ammonia) from H2 (Haber-Bosch or similar), so that it's easier to store than H2 and has a pretty nice energy density per volume. I want to believe it's a good idea but it's likely too energy intensive to be competitive.
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Also, hydrogen is an intermediate in the Haber process for producing ammonia for fertilizer. You are essentially burning food.
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Nothing is being burned. The hydrogen combines with oxygen from the air to produce electricity and water.
Re: The hydrogen economy is a scam (Score:2)
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Only Rube Goldberg can build the necessary infrastructure for this. It is totally unreasonable, unless they're making flying cars for outer space.
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so you have to use electricity to generate it (like by hydrolysis of water)
Most hydrogen is made by steam reforming [wikipedia.org] of NG, not by electrolysis. Although, if people are going to recharge at home, then electrolysis of water is most likely the way to go.
EVs work great, and only need cheaper batteries to be practical
HFCs work great, and only need better fuel tanks to be practical.
Maybe a trillion dollar industry can explore more than one option.
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Ideally, the best fuel would be something with a high energy per volume, such as the Audi-made synthetic diesel (e-diesel) from CO2 in the air, or perhaps ethanol. Something that doesn't need anything more significant than a liquid storage tank, as opposed to what is needed for CNG, or even LP gas. Cars get into wrecks, and who knows what might puncture the gas tank, so having a complex system is nice, but if it takes out a city block if the vehicle using it gets rear-ended, it isn't workable.
Then comes t
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As the subject says -- "fuel cell" -- that means no IC engine hydrogen and oxygen (from air) produce water and electricity directly. No Carnot cycle, no moving parts. After that the drive train is electric, just like a battery car.
You can make hydrogen by electrolysis, which is not so efficient, but you can do it whereever and whenever you have cheap electricity. Alternatively if you have methane that you are allowed to burn (whether it's natural gas or from rotting sewage) you can make hydrogen pretty che
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I'm not going to refute many of your points, however saying that it didn't work in the '90s for these reasons doesn't mean it cannot work better now. Enough auto makers are pursuing it (and some have had cars on the road for years) that maybe they can make something that is efficient.
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I think the idea is to use hydrogen as an energy storage alternative to batteries. The problem with batteries is that the basically suck. Sure, they suck a lot less than they used to but they are heavy, expensive, and take a long time to charge.
The (over-)simplified system with batteries is:
power source -> electricity distribution network -> charge battery -> power motor
The charge battery step is the long one. Even though EVs with a few hundred miles of range will work
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What's wrong with these automakers? Haven't they figured out by now that hydrogen is a total waste of time and effort?
That is actually not true. There are definite advantages with Hydrogen fuel cells..
a) The amount of weight that the cars need to lug around comes down a lot with fuel cells.
b) Recharging EVs at home will become an issue over time especially in apartment complexes because the apartment complex will need to draw huge amounts of power from the grid to make this happen and these chargers will have to be installed in every parking bay etc.
c) Refueling can be done pretty quickly. With EVs, even with fast chargers
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c) Refueling can be done pretty quickly. With EVs, even with fast chargers, it will still take about an hour to get enough charge to go for 100 miles.
Tesla Superchargers can charge 170 miles' worth in 30 minutes.
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The things you cite weren't limited by basic physics. Hydrogen-based power is.
Those things also didn't already have alternatives which were clearly better.
Re: Again? (Score:2)
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Are you talking about converting existing cars to CNG or LNG? There's some problems with that one, namely range. They did that about 15 years ago in Phoenix because of some tax credits or something and it was a disaster.
The main problem is that you need a big-ass and heavy tank to hold the stuff, and because it's gaseous (for CNG), you end up not having much fuel even with a giant tank taking up the car's entire trunk, or for pickups, about 1/3 of the truck's bed. So you wind up with a vehicle with limit
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1. It's better to have the pollution at the power station than being released all over cities & towns
2. People can charge their cars wherever there is electricity. If enough people drive electric cars, charging stations will appear everywhere, including at your work.
3. When your country gets its act together and gets cleaner electricity, no upgrade to the electric cars is required to reduce pollution.
VW/Audi/Porsche working on new tech? (Score:2)
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The sarcasm is strong in this one.
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Which tends to happen when the "lying bastards" aspect of the companies in question gets as high as it did.
They brought that on themselves.
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There are worse problems in advertisinig, like "SAVE20% IF SHOPPING > $100", so I have to spend money to save money??? - this is psycholigically VERY tricky.
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Do you mean emitting 30 times as much NOx as allowed is "just a little bit more polluting"?
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Re: VW/Audi/Porsche working on new tech? (Score:2)
Do you think Flint pollution is overrated or VW?
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Re: VW/Audi/Porsche working on new tech? (Score:2)
Poor people dying of cancer and lead poisoning isn't as sexy as middle class folks getting lung cancer and respiratory disease.
There are ways... (Score:2)
Hydrogen: Best selection of the worst downsides! (Score:2)
Hydrogen gives you the high up-front vehicle costs of an EV, the ongoing fuel costs of an ICE car, currently it gives you the fuel sourcing environmental problems of an ICE (look up where most hydrogen comes from today), and the fuel transportation and storage problems of...hydrogen.
Hydrogen cars are only missing the vehicle emissions problems and complexity of an ICE, and the range and refueling time problems of a current EV to be the worst of all worlds in all areas.
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review (Score:1)
Poly-gas fuel? (Score:1)
Is it feasible to build these engines such that they can run on several types of gaseous fuels - CNG and H2 and perhaps others like Propane? Flexibility in the fuel cycle could be a way to introduce H2 if large-scale manufacturing of it becomes worthwhile.
What's supposed to be the point of H2 fuel anyway, as far as cars are concerned? More convenient for fuel cells than Xanols?
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Is it feasible to build these engines such that they can run on several types of gaseous fuels - CNG and H2 and perhaps others like Propane?
Probably not. You would probably need a variable compression engine to add in H2. CNG or LPG dual-fuel is a simpler retrofit, "all" you need is to add injectors and nozzles and program the computer to handle it, or add another computer. As the VAG smog fiasco demonstrates, you can have multiple sets of maps in the PCM, so it's no problem to switch to different maps for a different fuel. You would also need a PCM with enough injector driver outputs to run a second set of injectors, or some sort of switching
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Impressive, you've explained how to do it and described the issues which will be encountered!
So H2 fuel introduces new limiting factors; therefore let me reorganize my question: With an engine designed to burn H2 fuel, like the ones mentioned in the original post, is it feasible to make cost-effective modifications such that it could also burn more conventional carbon-based gases?
Good. (Score:2)
Dear everyone who bitches about Hydrogen (Score:2)
jos lagunya (Score:1)