it's a great example of what can be done if your country is made of mountains and rain and fossil fuel that you export
now (it seems) the UK ban doesn't ban hybrids but the EU ban does
the same EU that 'changed population habits' towards dieseling
it's a great example of what can be done if your country is made of mountains and rain and fossil fuel that you export
Oh, they have some advantages that help their cause, of course. That they also decided to bank oil/gas revenue rather than use it to prop up meaningless tax cuts means they have money available to implement projects that help.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑07 Nov 2022, 13:05it's a great example of what can be done if your country is made of mountains and rain and fossil fuel that you export
I guess that the EU ban (like the UK ban) doesn't ban hybrids
It's my understanding that in the UK petrol & diesel sales will stop in 2030, but hybrids are allowed until 2035.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑07 Nov 2022, 13:05it's a great example of what can be done if your country is made of mountains and rain and fossil fuel that you export
now (it seems) the UK ban doesn't ban hybrids but the EU ban does
...
Zero tailpipe emissions rules out hydrogen in anything other than a fuel cell, doesn't it? Burning hydrogen in an ICE still generates emissions, not just water.Pat Pending wrote: ↑07 Nov 2022, 13:37
It's also possibly worth noting that the EU ban is actually phrased as 'all new vehicles must have zero tailpipe emmissions', rather than specifically banning ICE (although whether that allows any wriggle room at all I can't currently envisage).
what emissions ?
If you burn hydrogen in oxygen, you get dihydrogen oxide.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑07 Nov 2022, 15:27what emissions ?
(I speak as one who's reported that burning hydrogen produces oxides of hydrogen other than the innocuous Mr Water)
have we been told lies ?
how can we tell who's lying and who's truthing ?
an unsteady-state IC engine ie 'piston engine' will produce some hydrogen oxide that's not dihydrogen oxideMadMax wrote: ↑07 Nov 2022, 16:21If you burn hydrogen in oxygen, you get dihydrogen oxide.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑07 Nov 2022, 15:27(I speak as one who's reported that burning hydrogen produces oxides of hydrogen other than the innocuous Mr Water)
If you burn hydrogen in an internal combustion engine you will create NOx because air contains nitrogen and in the heat of combustion, some of that nitrogen will react with the oxygen in the air.
Agree burning hydrogen in an ICE, seems like an awful idea. The problem with an ICE is that it is very inefficient. If you take the average EV it runs at 14-17 kW per 100 km. A household generator can do 8 kW per liter. So if you would charge your EV with a generator you would get a very real 50km/l, which I have not seen a car do.MadMax wrote: ↑07 Nov 2022, 18:25A fuel cell makes more sense than direct burning from a hydrogen perspective. Entirely clean, it's an electrical drive system so regen braking etc., is all dead easy to implement without adding additional hardware. Fuel cell use is also much more efficient than ICE use, so you're getting more miles for your precious hydrogen which means smaller tanks, means easier to implement in small cars (typical city cars, for example).
The big problem with hydrogen is sourcing it and then storing it. Most hydrogen is currently sourced in a less than clean/efficient manner by steam reforming of methane, which also produces CO2, ironically.
Electrolysis has the potential to produce "clean" hydrogen, but of course requires electricity. And much of that electricity is generated from fossil fuels. Could be done with renewables, of course, but requires additional investment to add that capacity to the system.
Storing of hydrogen requires effort - you either need high pressure containers or cryogenic containers. Work is ongoing for other systems - storing hydrogen "in" other chemicals such as boron nitride, for example.
And then there's distribution. The UK, for example, has something like 6 hydrogen filling stations currently. 3 in/around London, 1 in northern England, 2 in Aberdeen. Shell recently closed its 3 hydrogen stations.
All of that adds up to EVs being the "better" "green" option for consumers at the moment (even though they also have issues of their own).
The simple issue with burning hydrogen in an ICE is that it wastes so much energy in the form of heat, just as oil-derived fuels, and others, do.Edax wrote: ↑07 Nov 2022, 21:12Agree burning hydrogen in an ICE, seems like an awful idea. The problem with an ICE is that it is very inefficient. If you take the average EV it runs at 14-17 kW per 100 km. A household generator can do 8 kW per liter. So if you would charge your EV with a generator you would get a very real 50km/l, which I have not seen a car do.MadMax wrote: ↑07 Nov 2022, 18:25A fuel cell makes more sense than direct burning from a hydrogen perspective. Entirely clean, it's an electrical drive system so regen braking etc., is all dead easy to implement without adding additional hardware. Fuel cell use is also much more efficient than ICE use, so you're getting more miles for your precious hydrogen which means smaller tanks, means easier to implement in small cars (typical city cars, for example).
The big problem with hydrogen is sourcing it and then storing it. Most hydrogen is currently sourced in a less than clean/efficient manner by steam reforming of methane, which also produces CO2, ironically.
Electrolysis has the potential to produce "clean" hydrogen, but of course requires electricity. And much of that electricity is generated from fossil fuels. Could be done with renewables, of course, but requires additional investment to add that capacity to the system.
Storing of hydrogen requires effort - you either need high pressure containers or cryogenic containers. Work is ongoing for other systems - storing hydrogen "in" other chemicals such as boron nitride, for example.
And then there's distribution. The UK, for example, has something like 6 hydrogen filling stations currently. 3 in/around London, 1 in northern England, 2 in Aberdeen. Shell recently closed its 3 hydrogen stations.
All of that adds up to EVs being the "better" "green" option for consumers at the moment (even though they also have issues of their own).
I guess the main issue is that an ICE always runs at suboptimal conditions (RPMs, load) whereas a generator doesn’t and an electric motor does not care. Running an ICE on hydrogen does not solve that. A fuel cell does.
But other than that I see a lot of negatives compared to EV’s. Not in the least the infrastructure that is needed just to get some degree of adoption.
Yes, EVs will be using some fossil electricity, but then every ICE car will be using 100% fossil fuel.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑08 Nov 2022, 19:21the EU expects to have decarbonised (renewabled) by 2030 38-40% of its electrical energy
so the EV will then still be at least 60% fossil-fueled
and of course people going EV will still buy five or ten times the power that they need
Power as in kW? Or BHP. BEVs got high power and acceleration. Instant torque makes it feel even more powerful. To get long range you need a big battery. And a big motor to get high efficiency. And large power electronics to get high efficiency. High power comes "free of charge". You can't have long range and high efficiency without high power available. It can of course be be limited in software, but who wants that?