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I read an interesting article in the papers a while ago concerning hydrogen
fuel cells. It made the point that the fuel cell can actually be more polluting than an petrol engine since all the hydrogen ejected into the atmosphere could have an adverse effect on the oxygen in the air and possibly lead to a decrease of global temperature... Triple Delta "Thomas J. Paladino Jr." wrote in message ... http://www.msnbc.com/news/937600.asp?0cv=CB10 It's not actually a GA-related project, the're just using a Diamond for the testbed. Still, it's an interesting idea. |
#2
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![]() "DeltaDeltaDelta" wrote in message ... I read an interesting article in the papers a while ago concerning hydrogen fuel cells. It made the point that the fuel cell can actually be more polluting than an petrol engine since all the hydrogen ejected into the atmosphere could have an adverse effect on the oxygen in the air and possibly lead to a decrease of global temperature... Shirley you're not serious? Tom |
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"DeltaDeltaDelta" wrote in message
I read an interesting article in the papers a while ago concerning hydrogen fuel cells. It made the point that the fuel cell can actually be more polluting than an petrol engine since all the hydrogen ejected into the atmosphere could have an adverse effect on the oxygen in the air and possibly lead to a decrease of global temperature... Read it again. I believe you'll find that the authors are complaining about the possible leaks in hydrogen production and transport. Here's a link discussing the report: http://www.nature.com/nsu/030609/030609-14.html Fuel cells themselves are infinitely cleaner than petroleum fuels. The hydrogen used in mass production cells may or may not be stored/transported in gaseous form. -- John T http://tknowlogy.com/tknoFlyer _______________ |
#4
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![]() DeltaDeltaDelta wrote: I read an interesting article in the papers a while ago concerning hydrogen fuel cells. It made the point that the fuel cell can actually be more polluting than an petrol engine since all the hydrogen ejected into the atmosphere could have an adverse effect on the oxygen in the air and possibly lead to a decrease of global temperature... The article was obviously written by a moron (or possibly misunderstood). Engines that use fuel cells eject water. Simple chemistry. Two molecules of hydrogen plus one of oxygen produce water (H2O) and a little energy (can you say "Hindenburg"?). George Patterson The optimist feels that we live in the best of all possible worlds. The pessimist is afraid that he's correct. James Branch Cavel |
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Now that you mentioned it, I also recall some thesis that if the water is
ejected from the engine, it will increase the moisture levels slowly until how-knows-what happens. It makes very little sense, yes, probably somebody wrote it in lack of anything else to write about... Triple Delta "G.R. Patterson III" wrote in message ... DeltaDeltaDelta wrote: I read an interesting article in the papers a while ago concerning hydrogen fuel cells. It made the point that the fuel cell can actually be more polluting than an petrol engine since all the hydrogen ejected into the atmosphere could have an adverse effect on the oxygen in the air and possibly lead to a decrease of global temperature... The article was obviously written by a moron (or possibly misunderstood). Engines that use fuel cells eject water. Simple chemistry. Two molecules of hydrogen plus one of oxygen produce water (H2O) and a little energy (can you say "Hindenburg"?). George Patterson The optimist feels that we live in the best of all possible worlds. The pessimist is afraid that he's correct. James Branch Cavel |
#6
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![]() DeltaDeltaDelta wrote: Now that you mentioned it, I also recall some thesis that if the water is ejected from the engine, it will increase the moisture levels slowly until how-knows-what happens. But the hydrogen was created by electrolization of water, removing exactly as much water from the system as will be restored when the fuel is used. It's a closed system in that regard. The net amount of water remains the same. George Patterson The optimist feels that we live in the best of all possible worlds. The pessimist is afraid that he's correct. James Branch Cavel |
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"DeltaDeltaDelta" wrote in message
... Possibly they meant that the hydrogen can be obtained from liquid water, but leaves the engine in a gaseous state. Some of this will condense, but some could also stay in the atmosphere and form clouds or drift into the higher layers of the atmosphere. Water vapor is already a byproduct of our current engine technologies. And yes, it is a potential problem. But fuel cells are FAR more efficient than combustion engines, without any of the other harmful emissions. Anyone trying to argue that fuel cells won't be a net win is just plain crazy. Pete |
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Boeing Boondoggle | Larry Dighera | Military Aviation | 77 | September 15th 04 02:39 AM |