NutmegCT said:
.... As the blurb says the fuel can be used in an ICE without modification, ......
Can an ICE just "run" on hydrogen now?...
I've seen experiments where a common, off-the street engine was converted to hydrogen use with little or no modification.
But for it to work <span style="font-style: italic">well</span>, I'm sure at least some modification would be appropriate, even if minor.
DrEntropy said:
We'd need a storage/delivery fuel system to handle the low temp & high pressure requirements but ...
This <span style="font-style: italic">is </span>that system. It would operate at low pressure and ambient temperature.
The system is based on storing the hydrogen by absorbing it into metal hydride media.
It has long been known that metal hydrides can be used to store hydrogen at practical temperatures and pressures. The biggest practical drawback has been long delays required for refueling because hydrides absorb slowly. (Nobody wants to spend many hours to refuel.)
Back when they were first proposed (I'm not sure how long the idea's been floating around but I learned of it more than twenty years ago), it was thought that the the most practical approach would be some sort of canister swap program.
The process this company is proposing is to transfer beads of storage media between tanks rather than transferring tanks of fixed media.
GregW said:
I'm curious how this can be zero carbon. They say they encapsulate the hydrogen in polystyrene, a petroleum product.
The encapsulation media would not be consumed in combustion. It would be depleted of hydrogen and reused.
What they don't mention is that in near term there would still be a big carbon issue, just not due to combustion in the vehicles. The vast majority of commercially available hydrogen is produced by cracking hydrocarbon compounds (like natural gas). That carbon has to go somewhere.
To have zero net carbon emissions you'd have to produce the H2 by a non-carbon releasing process like solar or nuclear powered electrolysis.
pc.