Amensotep

Hydrogen Cars

Hydrogen Cars

Saving the environment, or gasoline's bigger brother?

I've been seeing a lot of buzz over cars that give off water vapor over the past few years. Now, admittedly, it's a nice idea to have a car that gives off what is considered a clean fuel. Alas, that's where the problem lies.

Now, let's assume that, by clean, they mean "a gas that won't contribute to global warming," a.k.a. greenhouse gases. Of course, any time we need to see the worst possible result of greenhouse gases, we can just take a look at Venus. Yeah, I certainly wouldn't want to visit there. However, there may be a slight problem with this idea of water vapor being clean.

Water Vapor is the most abundant greenhouse gas in the atmosphere, which is why it is addressed here first. However, changes in its conentration is also considered to be a result of climate feedbacks related to the warming of the atmosphere rather than a direct result of industrialization. The feedback loop in which water is involved is critically important to projecting future climate change, but as yet is still fairly poorly measured and understood.


Source: http://lwf.ncdc.noaa.gov/oa/climate/gases.html

Oops. I think someone forgot to do their fact checking before trumping up hydrogen fuel cells.

Now, for real fun, one must understand that the water cycle is the whole core of the global warming argument. Earth gets warmer, more water wapor in the air, air continues to get warmer, and then comes the freeze. And what happens? Why, all of that water vapor helps drop the temperature immensely. Thus, the real danger of global warming is a killer ice age that humanity, and possibly all life on this planet, can't survive. Nevermind the fact life on this planet survived two or three of those killer ice ages before...

Oh, and the best part:

However, huge scientific uncertainty exists in defining the extent and importance of this feedback loop. As water vapor increases in the atmosphere, more of it will eventually also condense into clouds, which are more able to reflect incoming solar radiation (thus allowing less energy to reach the Earth's surface and heat it up). The future monitoring of atmospheric processes involving water vapor will be critical to fully understand the feedbacks in the climate system leading to global climate change. As yet, though the basics of the hydrological cycle are fairly well understood, we have very little comprehension of the complexity of the feedback loops. Also, while we have good atmospheric measurements of other key greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide and methane, we have poor measurements of global water vapor, so it is not certain by how much atmospheric concentrations have risen in recent decades or centuries, though satellite measurements, combined with balloon data and some in-situ ground measurements indicate generally positive trends in global water vapor.


Okay, for those of you who don't want to read all of that: Basically, they have no clue. We have a key element of the entire issue of global warming that is on par with how key gravity is to the issue of black holes and they understand less about it than they do about gravity. Which means that a lot of these equations they've been working to model global warming and its effects are missing important data that makes the results equal to trying to model a black hole while understanding only the phrase "what goes up must come down." And, top it all off, some of the people doing these models want to turn around and use a type of fuel cell that may compound a problem that their ignorance of this key item may prevent them from knowing the existance of.

Gee, anyone else see a problem with this? I mean, if increasing water vapor in the air as a result of greenhouse gases causes the whole mess that we're trying to prevent, then what would putting larger amounts of water vapor than even the most doomsdayish models of global warming predict (this is assuming all gasoline engines are replaced with hydrogen cells overnight) do to the environment? Seems to me that it would make gasoline seem tame. And, assuming those amounts, we might as well go ahead and carpet bomb the ice caps with fission warheads. Should have about the same results, give or take.

Oh, wait, I just noticed my source left out some information about plants (which are pretty worthless for increasing oxygen in the atmosphere, really). Well, in that case, let me try another. How about NASA? I know they're usually better about their facts.

Water vapor is the most important greenhouse gas. Not only are its infrared absorption features widespread and strong, but it also displays a significant continuum absorption. Thus, while not one of the "gases of concern" in the sense of anthropogenic modification, the feedbacks engendered by the higher water content of a warmer atmosphere (and, potentially, greater cloud cover) are an important element of these studies. Furthermore, water vapor, through continua centered at 100 and 1600 cm-1, is a crucial element in the radiative balance of the upper troposphere. TES routinely measures humidity (water vapor) profiles with a precision better than 10%.


Source: http://tes.jpl.nasa.gov/science/greenhouse.cfm

Scientists know that atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide have risen sharply in recent years, but a study released today in Paris reports a surprising and dramatic increase in the most important greenhouse gas - water vapor - during the last half-century.


"Half the increase in the stratosphere can be traced to human-induced increases in methane, which turns into water vapor at high altitudes, but the other half is a mystery," said Mote. "Part of the increase must have occurred as a result of changes in the tropical tropopause, a region about 10 miles above the equator, that acts as a valve that allows air into the stratosphere."


A satellite record of relative humidity data for the upper troposphere shows a 2 percent increase during the last 20 years in the equatorial region. However, the uncertainty in this determination is too large to allow a clear conclusion as to whether this is part of a long-term trend.


Source: http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Newsroom/MediaAlerts/2001/200104254688.html

Now, look at the date of this information. The second source is six years old. Why hasn't this been all over the news in my area? Considering the most important gas of the whole issue and one of the two key gases to maintaining Earth's temperature levels had a mysterious amount of increase, I would think this would be cause for a lot of concern. And turning around and increasing it even more withj hydrogen fuel cells just... I'm sorry, but I cannot express my opinion of that without slipping into profanity.

Seriously. It's a greenhouse gas that is the key to the whole global warming issue for Earth. It's also one of the gases we understand the least about in the atmosphere and people are wanting to replace gasoline cars with ones that give it off. And, worse, I can't find any models for this that don't end up making a Hollywood global warming movie look realistic, either. So, why are we doing this, again?
81,354 views 75 replies
Reply #26 Top
Someone doesn't know their history - the Hindenburg burned because the skin paint contained iron oxide and powdered aluminum (google Thermite if you want to know how that works) and wasn't properly grounded against static electricity. Not that hydrogen doesn't have some serious safety issues, but gasoline does too.


sorry the mythbusters busted this one.
Reply #27 Top
Electricity and alcohol are much better fuel source possibilities.


electricity just moves the tailpipe to the power plant.


alcohol has the same pollution problems of gas and now you need more land for growing the needed plant material.
Reply #28 Top
Someone doesn't know their history - the Hindenburg burned because the skin paint contained iron oxide and powdered aluminum (google Thermite if you want to know how that works) and wasn't properly grounded against static electricity. Not that hydrogen doesn't have some serious safety issues, but gasoline does too.


sorry the mythbusters busted this one.


No, not really. All they really "proved" is that the fabric wasn't entirely responsible. Any idiot knows that, that's the equivalent of saying the spark plugs provide all the power to run your car. The hydrogen did in fact burn, but the skin is what started it burning. And the way the ship was designed, a pure hydrogen fire wouldn't have been the catostrophic failure that actually resulted.
Reply #29 Top
I want a flying car...
Randal: Are you saying you wouldnt cut off your foot for the flying car? You are that selfish?
Dante: Its my foot how am I supposed to walk?
Randal: Why Walk? You'll have the Flying Car!
Reply #30 Top
I want a flying car...
Randal: Are you saying you wouldnt cut off your foot for the flying car? You are that selfish?
Dante: Its my foot how am I supposed to walk?
Randal: Why Walk? You'll have the Flying Car!


their working on it.
Reply #31 Top

No, not really. All they really "proved" is that the fabric wasn't entirely responsible. Any idiot knows that, that's the equivalent of saying the spark plugs provide all the power to run your car. The hydrogen did in fact burn, but the skin is what started it burning. And the way the ship was designed, a pure hydrogen fire wouldn't have been the catostrophic failure that actually resulted.




no they found that the paint job burnt really fast. but they also found that the paint job along with the helium did not burn any faster than the helium did alone.


Reply #32 Top

No, not really. All they really "proved" is that the fabric wasn't entirely responsible. Any idiot knows that, that's the equivalent of saying the spark plugs provide all the power to run your car. The hydrogen did in fact burn, but the skin is what started it burning. And the way the ship was designed, a pure hydrogen fire wouldn't have been the catostrophic failure that actually resulted.




no they found that the paint job burnt really fast. but they also found that the paint job along with the helium did not burn any faster than the helium did alone.




Quite possibly true (I haven't been able to find that segment online in its entirety) but they tested the flammability in a really half-assed manner. More importantly, an actual hydrogen fire would not match any of the witness acounts, nor the film of the incident. Given the vent design on the ship, flames would not have been visible as early in the fire as they were if the fire started from the hydrogen instead of the skin.

A vent fire would have been nearly invisible until the skin caught fire from radiated heat, which would have taken several seconds and a good percentage of the total hydrogen on board (the skin was designed to reflect outside heat, remember?) And when it did start, much of the top would have flashed at once, due to the explosive nature of the paint.

Much the same argument dictates against an internal hydrogen fire. If it was contained, it would have exploded, not burned. It certainly would have consumed all the oxygen in the crew spaces, which clearly isn't true because there were survivors. The witnesses would not have described seeing a glow from burning hydrogen - hydrogen flames do not emit visible light. If they saw fire, it wasn't hydrogen they saw burning (or at least not only hydrogen).

I really love the argument some people bring up that not all of the outside skin burned. It's true, but the part that didn't burn was on the tail, which wasn't full of hydrogen and didn't have the heat-reflective explosive paint on it because of that. Gee, the only part of the skin that didn't burn was the part not coated with explosives? Who would expect that to happen?
Reply #33 Top
there is the possibility of a lightening strike. which may have ignited the skin.
Reply #34 Top
electricity just moves the tailpipe to the power plant.


And power plants are generally FAR more efficient then a small gasoline engine and produce comparitively less emissions, if that is your main concern.

However, you are making a huge assumption about powersources. Electricity is very flexible. You can produce it from just about any possible power source, anything from sunlight to fossil fuels, to water movement. Cars running with electric engines would essentially not be tied to any one power source any more.

Besides, we now have the technology to run a house entirely on it's own solar and wind power. It's being done and will be done more and more. Add an electric car into the mix and you get something really efficient, free to run, infinite in supply and producing no pollution to speak of.


alcohol has the same pollution problems of gas and now you need more land for growing the needed plant material.


True, it has less potential, but does have some advantages. It shares electricity's flexibility, although to a much lesser extent. In addition, emerging technologies will make it possible to convert current waste material, such as straw, which is often just burned or plowed into the ground, into viable fuel. The pollution argument is not what it appears to be. True, it would put CO2 into the air, but no more than the plant materials it was made from took out of the air in the first place! Of more concern to me would be the more noxious fumes and some of the lung issues which gasoline and diesel also cause.

The biggest advantage, though, would be the relative ease of converting. The engines work exactly the same, just with reinforced metallics to resist the corrosion. It only costs a couple hundred more bucks to make a car with this capability.

Really, though, the internal combustion engine is obsolete and should be replace if something better is made, which it will, eventually.
Reply #35 Top

Besides, we now have the technology to run a house entirely on it's own solar and wind power. It's being done and will be done more and more. Add an electric car into the mix and you get something really efficient, free to run, infinite in supply and producing no pollution to speak of.


and currently to charge an electric car it requires that much power
Reply #36 Top
I want a flying car...
Randal: Are you saying you wouldnt cut off your foot for the flying car? You are that selfish?
Dante: Its my foot how am I supposed to walk?
Randal: Why Walk? You'll have the Flying Car!


They have those now but they changed the name. They are called planes.
Reply #37 Top
and currently to charge an electric car it requires that much power


Sigh.

No. They don't. There are people right now that have electric cars and live in entire self-sufficient houses. Electrics cars are not quite THAT power hungry. They just take forever to charge and have relatively low charge holding.

But some of the ones being worked on are much better. Those problems will be solved, and relatively soon.
Reply #38 Top
Have any of you heard of solar updraft towers? link is http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_updraft_tower

Put a couple of these in the Sahara is what I was thinking of doing.

Every type of energy here on Earth is indirectly solar energy if you think about it.
The future of energy production is doing what the sun does, fusion. Until we do that, capturing solar energy is what we need to do.
Reply #39 Top
I personally think that Hydrogen fuel cells aren't going to ever be what we as people end up using in our lives. From my understanding, (please correct me if i'm wrong), the same problems that plague electric cars will also bite fuel cell cars because the power has to be stored somewhere. Either you make it on demand, or you put it into either a battery or capacitator.
Personally, I think it would be better just to make a straight hydrogen based engine. No batteries or electic motors needed. I figure the only downside to that is lubricant, because in a gasoline engine, the gasoline acts, along with the oil, as a lubricant, something that i do not believe the hydrogen will do.

But it would be cool anyways.



Every type of energy here on Earth is indirectly solar energy if you think about it.
The future of energy production is doing what the sun does, fusion. Until we do that, capturing solar energy is what we need to do.


But will fusion ever work? We have cold fusion, it just produces so little energy its not feasible and hot fusion is just impractical, where on earth are we going to put a sun? If I had to choose i would say in the ocean, so people and the fishes can just learn to get along. Plus George W. Bush could sell some of the electricity back to the dolphins as part of our 'diplomatic agreement.'.

TTFN-Jesan Fafon
Reply #40 Top
I personally think that Hydrogen fuel cells aren't going to ever be what we as people end up using in our lives. From my understanding, (please correct me if i'm wrong), the same problems that plague electric cars will also bite fuel cell cars because the power has to be stored somewhere. Either you make it on demand, or you put it into either a battery or capacitator.
Personally, I think it would be better just to make a straight hydrogen based engine. No batteries or electic motors needed. I figure the only downside to that is lubricant, because in a gasoline engine, the gasoline acts, along with the oil, as a lubricant, something that i do not believe the hydrogen will do.

But it would be cool anyways.




Every type of energy here on Earth is indirectly solar energy if you think about it.
The future of energy production is doing what the sun does, fusion. Until we do that, capturing solar energy is what we need to do.


But will fusion ever work? We have cold fusion, it just produces so little energy its not feasible and hot fusion is just impractical, where on earth are we going to put a sun? If I had to choose i would say in the ocean, so people and the fishes can just learn to get along. Plus George W. Bush could sell some of the electricity back to the dolphins as part of our 'diplomatic agreement.'.

TTFN-Jesan Fafon


Fuel cells are inherently more efficient than internal combustion engines (ICEs). Current ICEs are approximately 40% efficient, meaning 60% of the energy in the fuel is wasted. Switching fuels won't affect the inherent problems. Fuel cells are not only more efficient, they have fewer moving parts so they won't break down as often.

You have your fusion technologies switched. We currently have marginally useful HOT fusion, but not cold. The problem with hot fusion is the energy required to contain and regulate the reaction is large, and output is currently pretty low. The most advanced reactors are just now passing the break-even point, and cost millions to make.

Speaking of fusion reactors, would you believe there is one (well, half of one) across the hall from where I work? It doesn't work any more, and is about 15 years behind current technology, but still... I have parts to a fusion reactor. Makes a great conversation piece for incoming freshmen.
Reply #41 Top
solar updraft towers


As interesting as this concept is, .5% efficiency is rather, er, stupid. Other forms are much better.

The most advanced reactors are just now passing the break-even point, and cost millions to make.


Not to mention that deuterium and tritium are extremely rare on Earth, returning us to the same problem as hydrogen fuel cells: it's a carrier, not a fuel source.
Reply #42 Top
One question, didn't a group of scientists create a table-top fusion device? Was that just a hoax or did it not count as cold fusion?

Second, what ever happened to the idea of putting huge solar panels in space and sending the energy it obtained back to earth via radio or microwaves? I saw it in a children's "The Future" book. Is there anyone out there trying that now?

Thirdly, for hydrogen creation, couldn't you simply use an Indium-Palladium alloy to create the H2? Would this not be less energy intensive that electrolosis?(bad spelling)

Fourthly: Is lack of fuel essentially the only thing preventing us from building hydrogen cars? We have the electric motors, and the fuel cell concept, but no where to replenish the hydrogen, correct?
Reply #43 Top
Typical, humans always think there are better ways to do things and look at the state of the world today.

Develope something new to wow the world and yet nature has already done it somewhere else.
Ooh what's this here.

Although it might be better to give the atmosphere a break from carbon emissions for a while and have vehicles poison the world in some other way. That way we know we can fall back to carbon emissions later  ;) 
Reply #44 Top
Sorry to come in a bit late, but . . .

A few things to note:

-Water vapor may be considered a "greenhouse gas," but it's very, VERY short lived - it has a tendency to form something called "rain" and exit the atmosphere very quickly. As others have said, this is just working with the existing water cycle: Overall, it's always the same amount of water.

"Stored hydrogen can be an explosion hazard,"

As opposed to gasoline ;)? I think that to get from place to place, people are fine with some risks, as long as the risks can be minimized.

"One potential hurdle for electric cars is infrastructure."

Yes and no - in the northern states and in Canada, there's actually some pretty good outdoor electric infrastructure due to to the cold weather: In many places, it is common for people to use electric engine heaters during the winter, so a lot of parking lots in northern states and Canada already have the infrastructure necessary for electric vehicles.

I used to live in Minnesota - yes, a lot of parking lots there had electric outlets. As counter intuitive as it sounds due to how many batteries react in cold weather, the northern states may actually be one of the best places to introduce electric cars. A little bit of electricity could even be used to keep the batteries warm while charging them (the charging process itself probably warms them up as well).

"electricity just moves the tailpipe to the power plant."

For the sake of argument, let's assume 100% of our energy is produced by fossil fuels (even though we *do* produce a *lot* of energy by other means) - even then, it's a lot more efficient than gasoline. People have done the math, and any way you figure it electricity is a whole lot better.

The infrastructure required to distribute gasoline is very expensive - you've got to pump the fuel, you've got to transport it to the ocean, you've got to transport it across the ocean, you have to transport it to the refinery, you have to refine it, you have to transport it to storage, you have to transport it from storage to the gas stations across the country - when all is said and done, just transporting the gas alone is probably a lot less efficient than distributing power over wires.

Add that to the inefficiency of the gasoline engine compared to the electric motor, and the "long exhaust pipe" argument totally breaks down. People have done the math on this, and even the worst estimates look a lot better than using gasoline.

I think electric and plug-in hybrids hold the most promise over all of the other alternative fuels. Hydrogen is nice, but it's gonna be at least five years or so before the technology is anywhere near ready to be put into production, and the same can be said for other technologies (and a lot of them have additional problems as well).

The electric car, on the other hand, is already available and it has been proven to be competitive to gasoline in nearly all areas. The only really big hurdle left is the range and recharge time of the batteries.

Even with that limitation, however, the electric car can still be useful as a car for going to work and for errands in town. I personally have a full time job - I drive to work every day, and I'd save a LOT on gas if I were to own an electric vehicle.

Which brings me to another point: These vehicles are not just about saving the environment.

-They're about saving you money - with gas prices skyrocketing, the amount you're going to save by using an alternative fuel gets better all the time.

-They're about decreasing our dependency on oil from countries that we can't trust. Quite frankly, we're giving a lot of money to some pretty bad people and governments.

Maybe this environment thing is a big deal, maybe it isn't - but it's not the only reason to look at alternative fuels, and even ignoring the environmental benefits a good case can be made for using something besides gasoline.

"One question, didn't a group of scientists create a table-top fusion device? Was that just a hoax or did it not count as cold fusion?"

If I remember correctly, nobody was able to reproduce the cold fusion results.

"Second, what ever happened to the idea of putting huge solar panels in space and sending the energy it obtained back to earth via radio or microwaves?"

It's still a good idea - and we have in fact been able to transfer energy in experiments using microwaves. Unfortunately, our space funding is now a fraction of what it used to be and a lot of great ideas were abandoned simply because there's no budget for much anymore.

And oh, yeah - NASA's top priority right now is getting people to the moon again, and hopefully eventually Mars. Lest we forget, that's one of the goals George Bush set. It seems we've been so wrapped up in the Iraq war and the upcoming elections we've forgotten everything else.

"Fourthly: Is lack of fuel essentially the only thing preventing us from building hydrogen cars? We have the electric motors, and the fuel cell concept, but no where to replenish the hydrogen, correct?"

You've hit upon one of the largest issues with a LOT of the alternative fuel ideas - there is simply no infrastructure for distributing them. The only alternative fuel that has anything close to an infrastructure right now is electricity - another reason why I think that electric cars is the best idea for an alternative fuel.

Yes, there are many places without outdoor electric outlets - but there's a lot more outdoor electric outlets than hydrogen fuel stations!! Besides, there's this useful thing called an "extension cord" - ever hear of it?

Creating new infrastructure for electric cars is also going to be a lot easier than creating it for other fuels. Think about it - you just hire an electrician. There's a lot of people who have a lot of experience working with and installing electrical devices. People who install equipment for hydrogen are, on the other hand, quite rare.

And oh, yeah - here's something that really demonstrates what electric cars are capable of:

http://www.teslamotors.com/

It's a car that gets 0 to 60 in four seconds. Did I mention it also gets 135 miles per gallon? No, that's not a misprint, that's one hundred and thirty five mpg - and it'll kill a Ferrari in a drag race. That is what electric cars can do.
Reply #45 Top
-Water vapor may be considered a "greenhouse gas," but it's very, VERY short lived - it has a tendency to form something called "rain" and exit the atmosphere very quickly. As others have said, this is just working with the existing water cycle: Overall, it's always the same amount of water.


no it isn't

because you are burning hydrogen some of which is combining with oxygen forming new water.


if you start out with water yes your right but if you start out with hydrogen then your wrong on this point. but we have already been adding water to the cycle now for at least 40 some years. the Saturn 5 exhaust was water.
Reply #46 Top
"no it isn't

because you are burning hydrogen some of which is combining with oxygen forming new water."

-Where do we get Oxygen and Hydrogen? Probably from water. Meaning we take out just as much as we produce.

-Even if we are adding water - chances are we'll just be adding it to the oceans, because it doesn't stay in the air very long. It won't really contribute much to global warming, and any effects are much easier to reverse. It's nowhere near as permanent as the other gases.

-Besides, I personally am pushing for the electric car over the hydrogen car :).
Reply #47 Top


-Where do we get Oxygen and Hydrogen? Probably from water. Meaning we take out just as much as we produce.



Wrong! We get the Hydrogen not from water but from processing hydrocarbons or some anorganic materials, or biological processes by some bacteria, or maybe some other source, but getting hydrogen from water is just way too energy inefficient.
The Oxygen we get from the air all around us actually, we don't need to "catch" oxygen from some source, it's automatically taken from the air as a result of the combustion of the Hydrogen.

Reply #49 Top
"An alternative idea so we can stop argueing about hydrogen."

Well, as I've said, I prefer electric cars over hydrogen anyways.

Compressed air is an interesting idea - although I do wonder it it'll suffer the same range limitations as the electric car.

Also, these companies have GOT to get into the game with better designs. I'm sorry, but the Tesla Roadster is the only car I've seen so far that looks like something I wouldn't mind driving. The rest are ugly. I don't want to drive a brick - I want to drive something that actually resembles a car and looks like it's actually seen some wind tunnel testing. Have they even tried those things on the highway (or, in the case of Europe, the Autobahn)?

Since when were bricks in style? Yuck. I think I'll wait for Tesla's "White Star."
Reply #50 Top
Compressed air is an interesting idea - although I do wonder it it'll suffer the same range limitations as the electric car.


hand/foot pump?