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Just saw an article by AP. It seems that Auburn University has made a breakthrough
in fuel cell research. They now have a practical way of catalytically separating the hydrogen from the carbon and sulphur in conventional fuels such as diesel. When used in a vehicle equipped with a fuel cell, fuel consumption is about one- third of what the same vehicle uses with a diesel engine. Since one of the major problems the military faces is supplying their toys with gas in a combat area, the military is *very* interested, and development sponsored by the military tends to produce results somewhat more rapidly than other. For one thing, the Army doesn't pay much attention to companies with vested interest in keeping mileage low. It will be interesting to see how this can be adapted to aircraft. George Patterson Great discoveries are not announced with "Eureka!". What's usually said is "Hummmmm... That's interesting...." |
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"G.R. Patterson III" wrote:
Just saw an article by AP. It seems that Auburn University has made a breakthrough in fuel cell research. They now have a practical way of catalytically separating the hydrogen from the carbon and sulphur in conventional fuels such as diesel. Interesting. What happens to the leftover carbon & sulphur? -- Dan C172RG at BFM (remove pants to reply by email) |
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![]() "Dan Luke" wrote in message ... "G.R. Patterson III" wrote: Just saw an article by AP. It seems that Auburn University has made a breakthrough in fuel cell research. They now have a practical way of catalytically separating the hydrogen from the carbon and sulphur in conventional fuels such as diesel. Interesting. What happens to the leftover carbon & sulphur? Add some potassium nitrate and make gunpowder? |
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Great,
Just what we need now. "Next on the CBS Evening News...We told you that they were unsecure, we told you that they don't screen their passengers of baggage. Now, they even produce their own explosives as they fly toward your home town!" Ron Natalie wrote in message . .. "Dan Luke" wrote in message ... "G.R. Patterson III" wrote: Just saw an article by AP. It seems that Auburn University has made a breakthrough in fuel cell research. They now have a practical way of catalytically separating the hydrogen from the carbon and sulphur in conventional fuels such as diesel. Interesting. What happens to the leftover carbon & sulphur? Add some potassium nitrate and make gunpowder? |
#5
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![]() Dan Luke wrote: Interesting. What happens to the leftover carbon & sulphur? I wondered that myself. They said the carbon is in the form of CO2 and CO, so I expect that that's just exhausted. Perhaps the sulphur is SO2 and also exhausted. We can hope not, but, if so, it's no worse than what's exhausted when the fuel s burned. George Patterson Great discoveries are not announced with "Eureka!". What's usually said is "Hummmmm... That's interesting...." |
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G.R. Patterson III wrote:
Dan Luke wrote: Interesting. What happens to the leftover carbon & sulphur? I wondered that myself. They said the carbon is in the form of CO2 and CO, so I expect that that's just exhausted. Perhaps the sulphur is SO2 and also exhausted. We can hope not, but, if so, it's no worse than what's exhausted when the fuel s burned. George Patterson Great discoveries are not announced with "Eureka!". What's usually said is "Hummmmm... That's interesting...." True, but at least you get the energy out of your engine when you burn the carbon and the sulphur. Makes one wonder what the overall efficiency is versus just burning the diesel. One problem with hydrogen engines no one seems to want to talk about is the fact that hydrogen burns hot. If you get your oxygen from the atmosphere, there is also a lot of nitrogen in there. Hot engines and nitrogen produce oxides of nitrogen which are a major constiuent of smog. There seems to be a big fly in the ointment for all the wonderous alternative energy sources: Alcohol: takes more energy to produce a gallon than you get out of burning a gallon. Wind: gets you sued into the ground as in Altamont Pass and most of England for killing tweety. Geothermal: clogs up the pipes with all the nasty crap that comes out and takes heroic efforts to keep that junk out of the atmosphere. Nuclear: where do I begin to enumerate the technical and social problems with nuclear plants? Solar: expensive and cloud cover, what cloud cover? Where is Scotty and a batch of dilithium crystals when we really need them? -- Jim Pennino Remove -spam-sux to reply. |
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By george, I think you've got it!!!
Another problem with the "hydrogen economy" is leakage. Since H2 is the smallest molecule, it will always leak in significant quantities from anything but the most expensive, most precisely engineered and manufactured systems. H2 diffuses into the atmosphere very quickly, and is also the lightest molecule. Too bad about the ozone layer... But hey, skin cancer is preferable to other forms, right? Not to mention fuel cell "stacks" are very heavy. Most of the fuel cell stuff I see are nothing more than "stunts" to attract ignorant investors or congressional earmarks. Fuel cells do have some wonderful applications on the low and high ends of the spectrum, but I really don't see them as "everyone's favorite power source". We need some major revolutions in materials science for that to happen. Not sure I agree about the nuclear angle. Fluidized bed reactors are really quite efficient and not able to "Chernobyl". Nuclear power has been around for decades, and if properly monitored by the NRC, not that bad. I grew up next to Big Rock (since decommissioned). Now my home town has to deal with a dirty coal-fired plant. I would have preferred the Nuke plant myself... Waste will be a problem, but better in WIPP than in the atmosphere! wrote in message ... G.R. Patterson III wrote: Dan Luke wrote: Interesting. What happens to the leftover carbon & sulphur? I wondered that myself. They said the carbon is in the form of CO2 and CO, so I expect that that's just exhausted. Perhaps the sulphur is SO2 and also exhausted. We can hope not, but, if so, it's no worse than what's exhausted when the fuel s burned. George Patterson Great discoveries are not announced with "Eureka!". What's usually said is "Hummmmm... That's interesting...." True, but at least you get the energy out of your engine when you burn the carbon and the sulphur. Makes one wonder what the overall efficiency is versus just burning the diesel. One problem with hydrogen engines no one seems to want to talk about is the fact that hydrogen burns hot. If you get your oxygen from the atmosphere, there is also a lot of nitrogen in there. Hot engines and nitrogen produce oxides of nitrogen which are a major constiuent of smog. There seems to be a big fly in the ointment for all the wonderous alternative energy sources: Alcohol: takes more energy to produce a gallon than you get out of burning a gallon. Wind: gets you sued into the ground as in Altamont Pass and most of England for killing tweety. Geothermal: clogs up the pipes with all the nasty crap that comes out and takes heroic efforts to keep that junk out of the atmosphere. Nuclear: where do I begin to enumerate the technical and social problems with nuclear plants? Solar: expensive and cloud cover, what cloud cover? Where is Scotty and a batch of dilithium crystals when we really need them? -- Jim Pennino Remove -spam-sux to reply. |
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"Mark T. Mueller" wrote in message
... Not to mention fuel cell "stacks" are very heavy. Most of the fuel cell stuff I see are nothing more than "stunts" to attract ignorant investors or congressional earmarks. http://www.aviationtomorrow.com/nuke/ http://www.wpi.edu/News/Transformati...l/onawing.html http://www.hfcletter.com/letter/sept...0/feature.html http://www.enn.com/news/wire-stories...1/ap_45705.asp http://www.platinum.matthey.com/medi...053088204.html Paul |
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#10
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G.R. Patterson III wrote:
wrote: Makes one wonder what the overall efficiency is versus just burning the diesel. If you go back and read my post, you'll see that the vehicles travel three times as far on a tank of fuel as they do with a conventional engine. That's what "fuel consumption is about one-third of what the same vehicle uses with a diesel engine" means. George Patterson Great discoveries are not announced with "Eureka!". What's usually said is "Hummmmm... That's interesting...." I found the AP story and the whole thing smells of inept reporting. From the story: "Fuel cell technology takes a regular fuel and pulls off its hydrogen molecules, which are stored as gas. The electrons from the hydrogen then power a battery." So what have they really built here, a true fuel cell that runs on diesel or a hydrogen generator that feeds a hydrogen fuel cell? My guess is that it is a hydrogen generator. From the story: "For example, the Stryker infantry transports use a hybrid engine that runs on fuel cell power or combusted fuel." So is this a conventional engine that runs on either diesel or hydrogen or is it a diesel engine supplemented with an electric motor? From the story: "But with a fuel cell, a truck with a given amount of diesel can run three times the usual distance,..." This one is really hard to swallow. To triple the efficiency, keeping engine power output equal, means the original engine/fuel combination has to have an efficiency of less than 33%. Conventional diesel engines are already much better then that while fuel cell efficiencies are stuggling to get much better than 50%. It is also hard to see how you are going to get 3 times the energy out of a fuel when you throw away a portion of the potential energy, i.e. the carbon. I think the AP guy that did this report got his training at CBS news. In an attempt to find some real facts, I found the following: www.dtic.mil mentions an Army hybrid electric vehicle project that "will integrate a proton exchange membrane fuel cell with a fuel reformer that can reform JP-8 fuel...". Unfortunately there are few details. A search of the Auburn site has lots of stuff about fuel cells to replace battery systems but nothing that seems to relate to the breathless AP story. So unless someone here has an "in" at the Anniston Army Depot or Auburn, I guess we have to wait for a competent reporter. -- Jim Pennino Remove -spam-sux to reply. |
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