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molex wrote:To retain a decent range you need a very highly compressed double skinned incredibly strong (and thus reasonably heavy and awkward shaped) pressure vessel. To fill that tank you need a bloody big compressor, requiring pretty significant energy in itself.
molex wrote:Hydrogen is obtained from electrolysis of water, using a lot of energy to break bonds in the H2O.
Short answer: Hydrogen isn't the answer. Certainly not for a combustion engine, personally I don't think fuel cells are the answer either.
fivebob wrote:Actually that's not true, you don't need to carry a hydrogen tank, you can use a normal fuel tank containing for example methanol, and a steam reforming unit to produce the hydrogen.molex wrote:To retain a decent range you need a very highly compressed double skinned incredibly strong (and thus reasonably heavy and awkward shaped) pressure vessel. To fill that tank you need a bloody big compressor, requiring pretty significant energy in itself.Nope, hydrogen in commercial quantities is produced by steam reformation of natural gas. Electrolysis is only used by those crackpots who try and make you believe you can run a car on watermolex wrote:Hydrogen is obtained from electrolysis of water, using a lot of energy to break bonds in the H2O.
molex wrote:...Nothing else comes close to the power requirements of a mass deployment and nothing else is as clean...
pc wrote:I think you missed the point.molex wrote:...Nothing else comes close to the power requirements of a mass deployment and nothing else is as clean...
How would you get your methanol?
fivebob wrote:molex wrote:To retain a decent range you need a very highly compressed double skinned incredibly strong (and thus reasonably heavy and awkward shaped) pressure vessel. To fill that tank you need a bloody big compressor, requiring pretty significant energy in itself.
Actually that's not true, you don't need to carry a hydrogen tank, you can use a normal fuel tank containing for example methanol, and a steam reforming unit to produce the hydrogen.molex wrote:Hydrogen is obtained from electrolysis of water, using a lot of energy to break bonds in the H2O.
Nope, hydrogen in commercial quantities is produced by steam reformation of natural gas. Electrolysis is only used by those crackpots who try and make you believe you can run a car on water
neon_spork wrote:A steam reforming unit in your car hahahahahahahahahahahahahaha... hahaahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha.
fivebob wrote:Nope didn't miss the point, just didn't consider it relevant to the discussion of hydrogen use in automotive systems. I think you may misunderstand the processes involved if you think it requires a 100% clean energy system to be viable.pc wrote:I think you missed the point.molex wrote:...Nothing else comes close to the power requirements of a mass deployment and nothing else is as clean...Production of methanol form syngas, which is a mixture of H2,CO & CO2 is actually quite cleanHow would you get your methanol?
You can use the CO & CO2 waste products from fossil fuel power production, the H2 and some of the CO & CO2 comes from steam reformation of methane. The steam is also a byproduct of power generation. Is that clean enough for you, or are you looking for the Nirvana of a 100% clean system?
Also note I said like methanol. There are other feedstocks you could use with a steam reformation unit to produce the hydrogen that might be "cleaner" than methanol
pc wrote:Looks to be a bit off topic here but molex seemed to writing from the point of view of the problems converting all transport to hydrogen based, and relating it to the reasons we would want to transfer away from the status-quo.
Assuming this, then a production method for hydrogen that involves the large scale use of fossil fuels or biofuels would create an end result not much different from the situation we are in today...
sergei wrote:I would say go electric + Nuke power plants.
Or bans cars all together and build a mega monster public transport (build before banning of course).
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