According to the US Department of Energy Hydrogen Program, a standard fuel car with a combustion engine runs at around 20 per cent efficiency, whereas vehicles that run using hydrogen fuel cells are around 40 to 60 per cent efficient.May 31, 2022
The energy in 2.2 pounds (1 kilogram) of hydrogen gas is about the same as the energy in 1 gallon (6.2 pounds, 2.8 kilograms) of gasoline.
In modern (yet two-year old) news...
The clarity is limited to california and only as leases - a way of doing long term quality tests driven in real traffic by real drivers with access to a limited number of H2 charging stations.In modern (yet two-year old) news...
Honda offers the 2021 Honda Clarity, a hydrogen fuel cell vehicle with 360 mile range...
https://hondanews.com/en-US/honda-a...ce8b-2021-honda-clarity-fuel-cell-now-on-sale
https://jalopnik.com/the-honda-clarity-is-dead-1847112400The clarity is limited to california and only as leases - a way of doing long term quality tests driven in real traffic by real drivers with access to a limited number of H2 charging stations.
Yes, there are still others in the very limited hydrogen car market.I have bad news for all you hydrogen fans out there: Motor 1, and Asian business site Nikkei report that the Clarity is going out of production along with the closure of the Sayama, Japan, plant that produces it. It’s not just the hydrogen model leaving either. The plug-in hybrid is getting the ax as well. In a statement to Motor 1, a Honda rep confirmed the death:
Honda announced it would be a limited production, a multi-year review and then will reassess. The fuel cell is not dead at Honda.https://jalopnik.com/the-honda-clarity-is-dead-1847112400
Yes, there are still others in the very limited hydrogen car market.
https://www.caranddriver.com/hyundai/nexo
https://www.caranddriver.com/toyota/mirai
It's not dead, only wounded.Honda announced it would be a limited production, a multi-year review and then will reassess. The fuel cell is not dead at Honda.
From car and driver...https://jalopnik.com/the-honda-clarity-is-dead-1847112400
Yes, there are still others in the very limited hydrogen car market.
https://www.caranddriver.com/hyundai/nexo
https://www.caranddriver.com/toyota/mirai
Sun to solar panel,I thought it would be better than that. If it is an aqueous electrolyte, then it's a pretty tall order keeping it cool when it has to dissipate 1kW for every 1kW it sends to the motor. At least it won't lose range by having to use fuel for the heater.
40% efficiency is no better than a diesel these days - I thought it would be an obvious choice whether to use hydrogen in a fuel cell or burn it in an internal combustion engine - it's not quite so clear-cut.
No, but I bet they would be charging me for hydrogen.. Is somebody charging you for sunlight or wind?
Because solar panels, electrolysis electrodes and pressure tanks are not free. If it's more efficient -> solar panel into vehicle's battery that's a lot more likely to be practical in general use with no CO2 to the atmosphere.Sun to solar panel,
solar panel to electrolysis electrode,
Electrode to water,
Water to hydrogen
hydrogen to low pressure tank A and Tank B
Use hydrogen in Tank A as fuel to compress fuel in tank B into vehicle's tank.
What's the concern with efficiency? Just because the fuel cell stack heats up a bit - no CO2 to the atmosphere either way. Is somebody charging you for sunlight or wind?
But "more" efficient compared to what? What makes 40% a "bad" or "disappointing" efficiency value? Yes, more is always better but, please explain your comparison. I'm not sure what CO2 to the atmosphere you are talking about - the goal is to use hydrogen as storage for renewable electricity generation sources. Yes, the existing energy companies want you to use coal and oil and natural gas but, what's the point? It's much more fuel efficient to direct,y burn natural gas than it is to create hydrogen from natural gas and then burn hydrogen as a vehicle fuel. Compressed natural gas vehicles already exist - CH4 to H2 is a waste of energy, compression and more.Because solar panels, electrolysis electrodes and pressure tanks are not free. If it's more efficient -> solar panel into vehicle's battery that's a lot more likely to be practical in general use with no CO2 to the atmosphere.
Don't worry, nobody will be buying a 850-bar compressor for their MrHydrogen off-grid DIY compressor.No, but I bet they would be charging me for hydrogen.
I can imagine that the major suppliers will be doing everything they can to prevent people from producing their own hydrogen at home.
Each energy conversion process has losses. Electrolysis is not as efficient as charging a modern EV battery. H2 and O must be recombined to generate electrical energy in a fuel cell car. That is not as efficient as a modern EV battery converting chemical energy back to electrical energy. These hydrogen storage and conversion losses waste valuable renewable resources.But "more" efficient compared to what? What makes 40% a "bad" or "disappointing" efficiency value? Yes, more is always better but, please explain your comparison. I'm not sure what CO2 to the atmosphere you are talking about - the goal is to use hydrogen as storage for renewable electricity generation sources. Yes, the existing energy companies want you to use coal and oil and natural gas but, what's the point? It's much more fuel efficient to direct,y burn natural gas than it is to create hydrogen from natural gas and then burn hydrogen as a vehicle fuel. Compressed natural gas vehicles already exist - CH4 to H2 is a waste of energy, compression and more.
The technology to convert power to hydrogen and back to power has a round-trip efficiency of 18%-46%, according to data that Flora presented from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and scientific journal Nature Energy. In comparison, two mature long-duration technologies, pumped-storage hydropower and compressed air energy storage, boast round-trip efficiencies of 70%-85% and 42%-67%, respectively. Flow batteries, a rechargeable fuel cell technology that is less mature, have a round-trip efficiency of 60%-80%.
Do you get all of your "facts" from a journalism major who no longer works for CNBC and now works for SBGlobal news? I'm sure he got all of his facts right and normalized all test methods across the different technologies. Heck, engineers don't make mistakes doing that, why would a journalism major? Check your sources next time. A hack article.Each energy conversion process has losses. Electrolysis is not as efficient as charging a modern EV battery. H2 and O must be recombined to generate electrical energy in a fuel cell car. That is not as efficient as a modern EV battery converting chemical energy back to electrical energy. These hydrogen storage and conversion losses waste valuable renewable resources.
https://www.spglobal.com/marketinte...y-disadvantage-in-power-storage-race-65162028
Hydrogen technology faces efficiency disadvantage in power storage race
Prove it's wrong. There are tons of research papers with much the same conclusion.Do you get all of your "facts" from a journalism major who no longer works for CNBC and now works for SBGlobal news? I'm sure he got all of his facts right and normalized all test methods across the different technologies. Heck, engineers don't make mistakes doing that, why would a journalism major? Check your sources next time. A hack article.
Post two.There are tons of research papers with much the same conclusion.
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