- #36
mheslep
Gold Member
- 364
- 729
By economically viable I mean the cost/performance of an H vehicle vs comparable C-H ICE vehicles. Now I'll spot you some emissions credits for the H car to start as that's certainly a cost. Maybe spot you some more for having using a domestic fuel source. Now let's look at H distribution and storage costs. First, if you go liquification you burn 20-40% of the initial H energy right away. Maybe that's a wash if your energy is renewable (geothermal), though its not free regardless. Second, that tiny H2 molecule leaks. Refueling, at rest, whatever, its going to leak. I read 10-20% gone. Third, either liquid H or compressed H tanks are too heavy to get the 500km range associated with gas ICE cars, and they're more expensive. Then there's the cost of H distribution: cost of trucking and building the expensive trucks. Guaranteed even small Iceland has some traditional pipelines in place to push C-H around which it will find is far cheaper than trucking H. The buses for example, at $1.1M, are not viable. I imagine storage tank/fuel system costs are a big part of that. No real bus company, sans state support, would buy one.Ivan Seeking said:First of all, I agree that there are still issues. Of course what makes Iceland unique is all of the free energy that they get from geothermal, which makes H2 from electrolysis practical.
First I think you need to define what you mean by "economically viable". But, no doubt, this is all still in the development stage. However, for example, I believe that BMW has a car that can run on either gasoline or H2 [internal combustion] with the flip of a switch, so it might be interesting to see what they and other people are doing.
Yes lots of them, but these are all subsidized DOE or state stunts. Doubt any business would try this it couldn't turn a profit. Of course one can sprinkle around some H2 stations but it doesn't scale because there's no economical method to distribute the H2 to the stations. Pipelines don't work. Your point about local production is crucial here as it opens the door a bit but I'm still skeptical.IS said:There are a tons links in the hydrogen thread linked above for the fueling stations.
I see that most hydrogen is currently made by reforming CH4, and that is still 7 to 15x more costly per energy unit than gasoline. I don't understand why that is so (the 7-15X part). I had thought the reforming a C-H compound to get H was mostly some kind of catalysis and didn't require much energy. This is relevant because I assume reformation is the same process to take algae C-H fuel and make H. Can anyone enlighten me?IS said:For me, none of this is as problematic as the issue of production. Right now there is no practical way to produce hydrogen that can compete with standard fuels. But for the long term it looks like algae could solve this problem. So the point is that once again we see that algae is the most promising path to follow no matter which fuel we wish to use - biodiesel, ethanol, and eventually even Hydrogen.
Last edited: