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fuel cells and battery-powered vehicles
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a briefing document

subsidary to transportable fuels

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Fuel cells and battery-powered vehicles is the seventh of a series of briefing documents on the problems of power consumption, posed by the steady depletion of fossil fuels and most particularly of pumpable oil.
One of a grouping of documents on global concerns at abelard.org.

On energy
1 Replacing fossil fuels—the scale of the problem
2 Nuclear power - is nuclear power really really dangerous?
3 Replacements for fossil fuels—what can be done about it?
3a Biofuels   3b Photovoltaics (solar cells)
3c tar sands and shale oil
5 Energy economics—how long do we have?
6 Ionising radiation and health—risk analysis
7
Transportable fuels   
7a Fuel cells and battery-powered vehicles

8 Distributed energy systems and micro-generation
9 Fossil fuel disasters
10 books on energy replacements with reviews

On global warming
4 Global warming
4a Anthropogenic global warming, and ocean acidity
4b energy pricing and greenwash
4c How atmospheric chemistry and physics effects global warming
4d Antarctica melting ice, sea levels, water and weather implications

Tectonics: tectonic plates - floating on the surface of a cauldron

sustainable futures briefing documents


Index
introduction
fuel cells
obtaining hydrogen
a prototype fuel cell car
some facts and figures
fuel cell technology
battery technology
plug-in electric car with 250 miles range
the economics and practicality of hybrid vehicles
battery materials - facts and figures
nanotech coming to lithium ion batteries
and now the beginnings of electric aircraft - who’s afraid of the end of filthy fossil fuels

coal to electricity better than coal to liquids

 

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Economics and money zone at abelard.org
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Energy - beyond fossil fuels at abelard.org

 


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Introduction

I am no vehicle mechanic, car buff or physicist. My interest is confined to the fossil fuel problems.

This subsidiary briefing document gives information on an example of a potentially non-fossil transportable fuel use. Fuel cell technology is also being increasingly used to provide small power plants for hospitals, hotels, precincts etc. This technology is scaleable.


Fuel cells

“The automobile industry of the late twentieth century is arguably the highest expression of the Iron Age. Complicated assemblages of some fifteen thousand parts, reliable across a vast range of conditions, and greatly improved in safety and cleanliness, cars now cost less per pound than a McDonald's Quarter Pounder. Yet the industry that makes them is overmature, and its central design concept is about to be overtaken.”

“The contemporary automobile, after a century of engineering, is embarrassingly inefficient: Of the energy in the fuel it consumes, at least 80 percent is lost, mainly in the engine's heat and exhaust, so that at most only 20 percent is actually used to turn the wheels. Of the resulting force, 95 percent moves the car, while only 5 percent moves the driver, in proportion to their respective weights. Five percent of 20 per-cent is one percent—not a gratifying result from American cars that burn their own weight in gasoline every year.

“Completely redesigning cars by reconfiguring three key design elements could save at least 70 to 80 percent of the fuel it currently uses, while making it safer, sportier, and more comfortable. These three changes are:

  1. making the vehicle ultralight, with a weight two to three times less than that of steel cars;
  2. making it ultra-low-drag, so it can slip through the air and roll along the road several times more easily; and
  3. after steps 1 and 2 have cut by one-half to two-thirds the power needed to move the vehicle, making its propulsion system "hybrid-electric."

“In a hybrid-electric drive, the wheels are turned largely or wholly by one or more electric motors; but the electricity, rather than being stored in heavy batteries recharged by plugging into the utility grid when parked (as is true of battery-electric vehicles), is produced onboard from fuel as needed. This could be achieved in any of a wide range of ways: An electric generator could be driven by an efficient gasoline, diesel, Stirling (external-combustion) engine, or by a gas turbine. Alternatively the electricity could be made by a stack of fuel cells—solid-state, no-moving parts, no-combustion devices that silently, efficiently, and reliably turn hydrogen and air into electricity, hot [warm] water, and nothing else.”
Quoted from Natural Capitalism

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“[...] the trend in energy use over the last one and a half centuries has been toward reduced carbon consumption and increased use of hydrogen. Each predominant feedstock - from wood, through coal, then oil, natural gas, and, ultimately perhaps, renewables - has contained more hydrogen and less carbon than its predecessor, and each successive fuel has been cleaner and more powerful.”

“Most industry is built on brute force: you start a process by increasing pressure or temperature. Nature changes free energy states much more gently, and, as a result, much more efficiently. So the next century is going to see a shift toward electrochemical processes and away from temperature and pressure systems." ” [Quoted from wired.com]click to return to the index on Transportable fuels

 

obtaining hydrogen

Almost all hydrogen produced industrially at the moment is obtained by reforming fossil fuel - coal, oil and particularly gas. A considerable part of the optimism for fuel cell production is to reduce pollution, as a fuel cell combines hydrogen and oxygen to form water. The water is the exhaust, just as the vast variety of filth is the exhaust from the fossil fuel industry. As present routes to obtaining hydrogen involve fossil fuels, obviously much of the filth is still generated, although it does have the advantage of being more separated from people in large conurbations. Of course, cleaning and controlling pollution in one place is more efficient, as is processing materials on a large scale rather than in many small units. In this case, forming clean fuels from fossil fuels. That is, breaking down coal, oil or gas for hydrogen at a large industrial site is more efficient than breaking petrol or diesel down in car engines.

For the future, hope lies in the more direct route of producing hydrogen from water, either by electrolysis or by high-temperature disassociation. Thus, much cleaner technologies may be used, such as windmills and nuclear power. In a nuclear power station, only about 30% of the energy is used to produce electricity. Running a nuclear power plant at higher temperatures, more of the energy otherwise wasted can be utilised to produce hydrogen through heat disassociation of water.

Thus, a recent widely used cliché: The Stone Age did not end because we ran out of stones, nor will the Fossil Fuel Age end because we have run out of oil and coal.click to return to the index on Transportable fuels

A prototype fuel cell car

Looking forward along the 'skateboard'
Looking forward along the ‘skateboard’ interior

Looking back towards the metal hydrid battery
Looking back along the ‘skateboard’ interior

Close-up of the fuel cell
close-up of the fuel cell

Close-up of the nickel metal hydride battery
close-up of the nickel metal hydride battery

click to return to the index on Fuel cells and battery-powered vehicles

some facts and figures

  • Hydrogen storage cylinders made from aluminium surrounding carbon fibre
  • Hydrogen stored at 350 bar/ 5,000 pounds per square inch (psi) pressure
  • Each cylinder holds 1 kilogram of hydrogen
  • Approximate driving range: 160 km
    This can be doubled with 700 bar tanks.
  • The fuel cell can be regarded as a small-scale electric generator. When taken together with the hydrogen, the fuel cell and hydrogen may be regarded as a battery.
  • Despite the fears, hydrogen is probably no more dangerous than petrol.
  • Hydrogen for the fuel cell can be produced in a large number of ways. For example, by replacing the hydrogen cylinders with a ‘reforming’ plant which extracts the required hydrogen from petrol, methanol or whatever.

There many variations and hybrid versions of this type of technology, steadily moving from development towards production. The photographs and data above are from the prototype ‘F-Cell’ built on an A-class Mercedes frame. This prototype has advanced to the stage where at least seventy vehicles are on the road being beta-tested by selected drivers in everyday conditions. One of the test drivers is quoted as saying that the car reacts so quickly, that when getting away from traffic lights, he is ahead of sports cars for the first forty metres or so. He has to watch himself to avoid picking up traffic tickets.click to return to the index on Fuel cells and battery-powered vehicles

 

Natural capitalism by Hawkens, Lovins and Lovins

Natural Capitalism
by Paul Hawken, Amory B. Lovins, L. Hunter Lovins

pbk : $11.67 [via amazon.com]
2000, Back Bay Books, 0316353000

hbk : $16.98 $16.98 [via amazon.com]
1999, Little,Brown, 0316353167
£16.14 [via amazon.co.uk]
2000, Earthscan Publications Ltd, 1853837636

click to return to the index on Fuel cells and battery-powered vehicles

fuel cell technology

Fuel cells are scalable and have a considerable range of potential applications - portable energy for electronic items such as lap tops, driving vehicles and local power plants.

The more efficient ones run on hydrogen, but transporting hydrogen has a variety of difficulties:

  • it leaks easily through pipes,
  • it has a relatively low energy density and requires compression or freezing to very low temperatures,
  • pressure vessels to be secure add considerable weight.
  • Hydrogen becomes liquid at -252.8°C / -423°F / 20°K. Hydrogen freezes at -259°C / 434°F / 14°K. It becomes a gas at -253°C / -423°F. All values are at 1 atmosphere / atmospheric pressure.

Therefore, reformers of various types are being developed (reformer: a device that strips out the hydrogen from the feed stock and supplies the hydrogen to the fuel cell).

For static power stations, the usual energy supply is in the form of ‘natural’ gas which can be piped, whereas for mobile units methanol is preferred.

Reformers often require expensive catalysts such as platinum.

There are problems with the life of both reformers and fuel cells [see also batteries]. Unsurprisingly, this is an area of intensive research.

“[..] the UltraCell product is different than other methanol fuel cells in that it converts methanol into pure hydrogen through it's revolutionary micro-reformer. Most portable fuel cell technologies are based on direct methanol fuel cell (DMFC) technology. The fundamental difference between the two is that DMFCs feed methanol directly to the individual cells, whereas the UltraCell RMFC technology employs its innovative micro fuel reformer to convert the methanol to hydrogen fuel and feeds that hydrogen to the individual cells. The UltraCell solution provides fuel cell stacks with twice the efficiency at half the size, while using ten times less precious metals than DMFCs.” [Quoted from ultracellpower.com]

Powercell from Ultracellpower.com
Image credit: ultracellpower.com

Size: 150mm x 230mm x 43 mm / 6 inches x 9 inches x 1.7 inches
Weight: 260 grams
Output power: 10 - 25 watts

This image is not full-scale. The unit is approximately the size of a standard hardback book.

click to return to the index on Fuel cells and battery-powered vehicles

battery technology

As you may know from experience of car, laptop and other rechargeable batteries, the life expectancy of these devices is not wonderful. The large batteries (battery packs) used in electric cars can run to several thousand dollars. For example, this UK link quotes lightweight battery cars as running the equivalent of 600 miles on the price of a gallon of petrol. (Remember, petrol is more expensive in Europe - about twice the price in the USA.)

Increasingly, cities are giving special concessions to non-polluting cars. This can be a big consideration in a city like London with a £8-a-day congestion charge and horrendous parking fees. This has to be balanced against [also from the link]:

“Reliability: battery life for the G-Wiz is estimated at two to four years, depending on usage. The car is covered by a two-year warranty but if the battery fails outside that, it costs £1,200. Twike says its batteries will last for 50,000 miles, with a replacement cost of £3,180-£6,980”.

plug-in electric car with 250 miles range

Tesla Roadster electric carTesla Roadster electric car

If this lives up to expectations/claims this is considerable step forward to future transport - plug-in electric charging, 250 miles range and about 0-60mph in 4 seconds!

Cockpit of the Tesla Roadster“63% of US oil use is for transport
“Electric power generation in the USA does not use oil. Coal, hydro, nuclear, solar, and natural gas are typical sources for generating electricity. Power generation plants, even coal burning ones, are inherently more efficient and less polluting than vehicles due to economies of scale and the ability to more efficiently remove pollutants from a smaller number of much larger fixed locations.

“Also, an electric car is far more efficient than a gasoline car, so the amount of pollution generated by producing the electricity to drive an EV a given distance is much less than the pollution from the gasoline to drive an internal combustion car the same distance.”

Driving will be much simpler with advanced braking and transmission.systems.

Estimated battery life - 500 complete discharge cycles.

“Driving only 50 miles is only a partial discharge, roughly using 20% of the charge. If a driver continues to drive 50 miles every day and recharges every night, then after 5 days they would complete the equivalent of one charge/discharge cycle.

“In estimating the life of our batteries, you can multiply the number of cycles by the range. Thus, 500 cycles times 250 miles/charge works out to 125,000 miles, but our estimate is a more conservative 100,000 miles. However the cycle life of 500 cycles is based upon performance that is more challenging to the battery cells than our application.

“A full charge using the home system can be achieved in as little as 3.5 hours.”

Charging the Tesla RoadsterCharging is done either by using a professionally installed home charging unit, or by a portable unit, which is multi-voltage. The home charger runs at 70 amps/110 volts - this is a heavy current load, more than is required for an electric cooker, so users must ensure that their household electricity supply is not overloaded. Note that at lower amperages, for instance when using the portable charger, recharge times can be considerably longer.

The batteries will be seriously expensive to replace, so this price is difficult to come by, but see above for other battery prices.

100,000 miles of go juice in Europe will cost very roughly 10,000 euros or pounds, which is probably much more than a battery replacement cost; but more than the 1000 euros or pounds claimed for off-peak charging for the same distance. Guesses at a price for the new vehicle are currently around $100,000/£52,000, so buyers at this level are unlikely to jib at the low £1000s for battery replacement charges.

Doubtless, prices will steadily shrink as such vehicles and improved versions go into mass production. at some point this should lead to a paradigm shift. However, such expansion would result in massively expanded electricity generating requirements.

 

the economics and practicality of hybrid vehicles

“A diesel hybrid can cut fuel consumption by a quarter versus a standard diesel. The challenge, PSA said a year ago, is to cut the cost difference between the two to 2,000 euros (US$2,600) or less from around 8,000 euros at the time.”

“For instance, fuel cell cars need to have an operating life of about 5,000 hours to compete effectively but at this stage only last around 2,000 hours, a DaimlerChrysler spokeswoman said.”

click to return to the index on Transportable fuels(add comment)


battery materials - facts and figures

  • For similar power, a lithium-ion battery weighs around half the weight of a nickel-hydride battery. Lead, another metal used for batteries is even heavier.
  • A hybrid car battery contains of some10 kilograms of nickel.
  • Price of nickel: US$36,200 a tonne [June 2007].
  • In 2006, the battery industry consumed 12,000 tonnes of lithium, which represents around a quarter of total output.
  • Price of lithium: US$7,800-8,500 a tonne [June 2007].
  • There is a huge supply of lithium in South America (mainly in Chile). Other unexploited sources suggested are North America and Russia.

nanotech coming to lithium ion batteries

“In the hybrid market, our product’s unique performance capabilities address power and cost barriers that currently limit HEV and PHEV adoption. In addition, A123Systems’ manufacturing model enables large volume production (millions of cells annually) at high quality and very competitive cost.

“A123Systems’ automotive class lithium ion[tm] technology uses proprietary Nanophosphate[tm] material that offers numerous unique features for hybrid applications, including unmatched power, abuse tolerance and life.” [Quoted from a123systems.com]

acronym

phev : plug-in hybrid electric vehicle.

application for using lithium-ion batteries containing nanophosphate

The Killacycle, the world's fastest electric-powered drag bike. Image credit: killacycle.com
The Killacycle, the world’s fastest electric-powered drag bike

    An electric motor-cycle that goes from 0-60 mph in 1.5 seconds.
  • It goes to156 mph in 8.16 seconds.
  • 990 A123Systems M1 [ANR26650M1] cells mounted in the bike.
    • Power output: over 350 horse power.
    • 900 cells make up a 375 volt, 7.5 kW-hr battery pack.
    • Battery pack gives1575 amps.
    • Powerpack weight: 161lb [73kg]
  • Powered by 880, 2.3 amp-hr Lithium Ion cells made by A123Systems.
  • Each 70 gram, 3.4 volt cells can put out over 150 amps
  • Zilla 2K-HV motor controller (made by Cafe’ Electric) directs a 374 volt, 1350 amp flow of electricity from the battery pack to the twin electric motor.

  • data sheet on the Killacycle.

    “...the KillaCycle is just a giant cordless drill with wheels.”

The manufacturers claim these batteries require much less oversizing by virtue of their reliability and power qualities.

Several such vehicles are now claiming into the 100mpg range equivalent, togrether with high acceleration and substantial ranges.

Plug-in electricity is far cheaper than highly taxed oil prices. 70% of USA drivers travel less than 40 miles per day. Battery prices are expected to fall considerably under mass production.

Then, it will become possible to charge batteries from photovoltaic arrays on your own property, thus privatising your fuel production.

Naturally, government will be displeased to see the vast taxes from oil and their centralised systems under threat.

marker at abelard.org

Lightning car, powered by Nanosafe batteries.  Image credit: Lightning Car Company.This proposed British car will also run on nanotechnology lithium-ion batteries. However, in this case, the technology is based on nano-titanate materials from Altairnano [4-page .pdf], where as A123Systems uses nanophosphates.

 

Four GoldenYak (tm) awardThe Altairnano .pdf is an excellent introduction to problems with standard lithium-ion batteries, and the much improved performance using a nano-titanate negative electrode, in place of the more common graphite cathode. For example:

“[...] This uncontrollable reaction [in standard lithium-ion batteries] is called a thermal runaway and ultimately leads to the destruction of the battery, and a resulting fire which could ignite the device to which the battery is connected such as an electric vehicle, laptop or cellphone.

“The initial increase in temperature could be caused by a number of problems including external shorting of the battery, internal shorting of the electrodes resulting from mechanical damage to the battery or a manufacturing defect, overcharging of the battery, electronic control unit failure or external heat. Impurities in the battery could be introduced during the manufacturing process ultimately leading to an internal shorting of the battery.”

(add comment)

click to return to the index on Transportable fuels


and now the beginnings of electric aircraft - who’s afraid of the end of filthy fossil fuels

“ 'Hydrogen and fuel cell power technologies have now reached the point where they can be exploited to initiate a new era of propulsion systems for light aircraft and small commuter aircraft,' according to Professor Giulio.

“The advantages of deploying these technologies will be low noise and low emissions - features which are particularly important for commuter aeroplanes, which usually take off and land in urban areas.

“The possibility to take off and land without contravening the noise abatement regulations set for small airfields, in urban areas and near population centres, will allow the use of airfields late at night, when noise regulations are the most stringent.[Quoted from cordis.europa.eu]

marker at abelard.org

“In an effort to develop environmentally progressive technologies for aerospace applications, Boeing [NYSE: BA] researchers and industry partners throughout Europe plan to conduct experimental flight tests this year of a manned airplane powered only by a fuel cell and lightweight batteries.

“The systems integration phase of the Fuel Cell Demonstrator Airplane research project, under way since 2003 at Boeing Research and Technology -- Europe (BR&TE), was completed recently. Thorough systems integration testing is now under way in preparation for upcoming ground and flight testing.

“ "Given the efficiency and environmental benefits of emerging fuel cell technology, Boeing wants to be on the forefront of developing and applying it to aerospace products," said Francisco Escarti, BR&TE managing director. "The Fuel Cell Demonstrator Airplane project is an important step in that direction." ” [Quoted from boeing.com]

marker at abelard.org

coal to electricity better than coal to liquids

Meanwhile, a study suggesting coal to liquids is far less efficient and clean than coal to electricity, with or without sequestration, and thence plug-ins - that is, by replacing electric vehicles for ICEs (internal combustion engines).

“The Carnegie Mellon Electricity Industry Center (CEIC) has released a life cycle study [1] of prospective US transportation C02 emissions, comparing plug in hybrids to conventional ICE vehicles under a variety of coal energy input scenarios.” [Quoted from treehugger.com]

Comparing transport life cycle co2 emissions. Image credit: Carnegie Mellon Electricity Industry Center (CEIC)

(add comment)

click to return to the index on Transportable fuels

end note

  1. This link goes to an abstract of this study. The full .pdf file is password-protected. A password is available from this linked page. The .pdf is also linked from this page.

Related further documents

On energy
1 Replacing fossil fuels—the scale of the problem
2 Nuclear power - is nuclear power really really dangerous?
3 Replacements for fossil fuels—what can be done about it?
3a Biofuels   3b Photovoltaics (solar cells)
3c tar sands and shale oil
5 Energy economics—how long do we have?
6 Ionising radiation and health—risk analysis
7
Transportable fuels   
7a Fuel cells and battery-powered vehicles

8 Distributed energy systems and micro-generation
9 Fossil fuel disasters
10 books on energy replacements with reviews

On global warming
4 Global warming
4a Anthropogenic global warming, and ocean acidity
4b energy pricing and greenwash
4c How atmospheric chemistry and physics effects global warming
4d Antarctica melting ice, sea levels, water and weather implications

Tectonics: tectonic plates - floating on the surface of a cauldron

sustainable futures briefing documents


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