There is a lot of talk and hype about a Hydrogen Economy with all the concern and politics of global warming. At best it is wishful thinking, at worse deceptive and dishonest..
There are many problems with hydrogen fuel cells, most of which are engineering problems that can probable be solved if time and money are of no importance. But there is one problem that can never be solved, and that is free hydrogen is not a source of energy, it is a carrier of energy.
Free hydrogen does not exist on this planet. It is all bonded to other molecule like oxygen to make water or in hydrocarbons like natural gas and petroleum. Basic physical laws tell us it takes more energy to break these molecular bonds, than to form a bond. It is the Second Law of Thermodynamics, and there is no way around it. Scientist have been working for decades trying to find a catalyst to lower the energy requirement to make hydrogen, but it will never be unity. Best hope is well to wheel efficiency is 50%..
All free hydrogen today used for any commercial or industrial use is all made from Natural Gas. So right from the start you are still dependent on fossil fuel to make it. To make hydrogen from NG you burn NG to make steam from water then the steam is used to strip the hydrogen from the methane bond. So what you do is input 10 units of energy from NG to get 4 units out, or 40% efficiency. So you can clearly see the problem there. You are better off just using the natural gas and burning in an engine or a boiler. But here is the real killer. Hydrogen made from NG will always be a multiple of the NG, and have to compete with the very fuel it is made from. So much for NG.
Ah, but I know what you are thinking, hydrogen can be made from water with the electrolysis process using solar and wind power. Well that is the wishful thinking part and what politicians would like you to believe as they poor billions of your dollars into a bottomless pit.
Here is the first problem; electrolysis is less efficient than steam fracturing with NG, around 25% efficient from air to wheel. Even with the advances in PV technology today would take enormous amounts of land covering the Midwest plains, so much for agriculture and food. OK you can cover the whole desert southwest, no one will miss that right? Well how do you plan to get the water there? At current fuel demands you are talking about routing 10% of the Mississippi river flow to processing plants. No problem. Now for the big problem. Like NG the demand for the electric power will have to compete with hydrogen production, and always be a multiple. So much for RE sources.
The only way to realistically and economically method to produce hydrogen is with nuclear energy by using the excess heat and generation capacity. In the USA it would take an additional 900 nuclear reactors to meet current transportation needs. Even though it is the most economical method to produce hydrogen, at current technology and prices to make an equivalent amount of hydrogen to equal 15 gallons of gasoline is $400. How does that sound?
Well enough of the production problems, that is the easy and inexpensive part. Now let
There are many problems with hydrogen fuel cells, most of which are engineering problems that can probable be solved if time and money are of no importance. But there is one problem that can never be solved, and that is free hydrogen is not a source of energy, it is a carrier of energy.
Free hydrogen does not exist on this planet. It is all bonded to other molecule like oxygen to make water or in hydrocarbons like natural gas and petroleum. Basic physical laws tell us it takes more energy to break these molecular bonds, than to form a bond. It is the Second Law of Thermodynamics, and there is no way around it. Scientist have been working for decades trying to find a catalyst to lower the energy requirement to make hydrogen, but it will never be unity. Best hope is well to wheel efficiency is 50%..
All free hydrogen today used for any commercial or industrial use is all made from Natural Gas. So right from the start you are still dependent on fossil fuel to make it. To make hydrogen from NG you burn NG to make steam from water then the steam is used to strip the hydrogen from the methane bond. So what you do is input 10 units of energy from NG to get 4 units out, or 40% efficiency. So you can clearly see the problem there. You are better off just using the natural gas and burning in an engine or a boiler. But here is the real killer. Hydrogen made from NG will always be a multiple of the NG, and have to compete with the very fuel it is made from. So much for NG.
Ah, but I know what you are thinking, hydrogen can be made from water with the electrolysis process using solar and wind power. Well that is the wishful thinking part and what politicians would like you to believe as they poor billions of your dollars into a bottomless pit.
Here is the first problem; electrolysis is less efficient than steam fracturing with NG, around 25% efficient from air to wheel. Even with the advances in PV technology today would take enormous amounts of land covering the Midwest plains, so much for agriculture and food. OK you can cover the whole desert southwest, no one will miss that right? Well how do you plan to get the water there? At current fuel demands you are talking about routing 10% of the Mississippi river flow to processing plants. No problem. Now for the big problem. Like NG the demand for the electric power will have to compete with hydrogen production, and always be a multiple. So much for RE sources.
The only way to realistically and economically method to produce hydrogen is with nuclear energy by using the excess heat and generation capacity. In the USA it would take an additional 900 nuclear reactors to meet current transportation needs. Even though it is the most economical method to produce hydrogen, at current technology and prices to make an equivalent amount of hydrogen to equal 15 gallons of gasoline is $400. How does that sound?
Well enough of the production problems, that is the easy and inexpensive part. Now let
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