• Welcome to TechPowerUp Forums, Guest! Please check out our forum guidelines for info related to our community.

Why did we abandon hydrogen cars so quickly?

ARF

Joined
Jan 28, 2020
Messages
4,670 (2.64/day)
Location
Ex-usa | slava the trolls
Population density rise is the elephant in the room. You can't simply expect to remain stable indefinitely with finite amounts of resources to share plus the rich and powerful aren't so great at that.

Countries such as the Russian Federation, Canada, and whole continents like Africa or Australia are almost empty, there are no people living there to claim too high density. It is extremely low population density in large parts of the globe.

It is propaganda by the world "ellites" which don't like the human race, anyways, and want it to disappear.

There is enough for everyone need, but not enough for everyone greed..
 
Joined
May 17, 2021
Messages
3,005 (2.32/day)
Processor Ryzen 5 5700x
Motherboard B550 Elite
Cooling Thermalright Perless Assassin 120 SE
Memory 32GB Fury Beast DDR4 3200Mhz
Video Card(s) Gigabyte 3060 ti gaming oc pro
Storage Samsung 970 Evo 1TB, WD SN850x 1TB, plus some random HDDs
Display(s) LG 27gp850 1440p 165Hz 27''
Case Lian Li Lancool II performance
Power Supply MSI 750w
Mouse G502
Countries such as the Russian Federation, Canada, and whole continents like Africa or Australia are almost empty, there are no people living there to claim too high density. It is extremely low population density in large parts of the globe.

It is propaganda by the world "ellites" which don't like the human race, anyways, and want it to disappear.

There is enough for everyone need, but not enough for everyone greed..

There is a reason all those places you mentioned aren't more populated. It really isn't that difficult to understand it. I guess you forgot Antarctica
 

ARF

Joined
Jan 28, 2020
Messages
4,670 (2.64/day)
Location
Ex-usa | slava the trolls
There is a reason all those places you mentioned aren't more populated. It really isn't that difficult to understand it. I guess you forgot Antarctica

Many reasons, actually. Wars, relatively recent development as is Canada or Australia, etc...
 
Joined
May 17, 2021
Messages
3,005 (2.32/day)
Processor Ryzen 5 5700x
Motherboard B550 Elite
Cooling Thermalright Perless Assassin 120 SE
Memory 32GB Fury Beast DDR4 3200Mhz
Video Card(s) Gigabyte 3060 ti gaming oc pro
Storage Samsung 970 Evo 1TB, WD SN850x 1TB, plus some random HDDs
Display(s) LG 27gp850 1440p 165Hz 27''
Case Lian Li Lancool II performance
Power Supply MSI 750w
Mouse G502
Many reasons, actually. Wars, relatively recent development as is Canada or Australia, etc...
Both Canada and Australia are very big, but very small if you consider the land suitable for living. And yes people can live on Antarctica and even on the Moon or Mars but what cost, Canada energy consumption per capita is insane.
 

ARF

Joined
Jan 28, 2020
Messages
4,670 (2.64/day)
Location
Ex-usa | slava the trolls
Both Canada and Australia are very big, but very small if you consider the land suitable for living Canada energy consumption per capita is insane.

Canada is fine - its position is almost as Europe's.
And yes, it is easier and more energy efficient to warm large apartment buildings than individual disperse houses.
 

ARF

Joined
Jan 28, 2020
Messages
4,670 (2.64/day)
Location
Ex-usa | slava the trolls
BMW and Toyota just gave hydrogen cars a big vote of confidence
The two automakers will work together to jointly develop hydrogen fuel-cell-powered cars that we could see as early as 2025.

BMW and Toyota just gave hydrogen cars a big vote of confidence (inputmag.com)
Google News - Search

1661857931892.png

1661857973760.png
 
Joined
May 17, 2021
Messages
3,005 (2.32/day)
Processor Ryzen 5 5700x
Motherboard B550 Elite
Cooling Thermalright Perless Assassin 120 SE
Memory 32GB Fury Beast DDR4 3200Mhz
Video Card(s) Gigabyte 3060 ti gaming oc pro
Storage Samsung 970 Evo 1TB, WD SN850x 1TB, plus some random HDDs
Display(s) LG 27gp850 1440p 165Hz 27''
Case Lian Li Lancool II performance
Power Supply MSI 750w
Mouse G502
it's a bit off topic, but come on Toyota. This was the company that pioneered with the Prius, then decided to do nothing with it, then bet on hydrogen, and then decided to end that and leave their customers holding the baby, then came back to electric only to fail in the most spectacular of ways and again to bad for the idiots that bought them, and now his back on hydrogen, one has to wonder what will be the result :D

back on topic, no batteries and all the bad it does and the problems sourcing materials, more range, faster charging, you'd actually think this is a no brainer.
 
Joined
Mar 4, 2016
Messages
713 (0.22/day)
Location
Zagreb, Croatia
System Name D30 w.2x E5-2680; T5500 w.2x X5675;2x P35 w.X3360; 2x Q33 w.Q9550S/Q9400S & laptops.
i can't see the video now but the problem is energy density, it's still far away from replacing Lithium. But there are other promising replacements for lithium.
No, it is not. Right now CaTL are some 5y back where LiIon was or same as worst batteries on the market.
That is NOT FAR, considering that they are abundant in source & does not go in flames & is considering now a "heavy industry & domestic" market.

There is also some other technology, which will put it in the car with energy density. But before it is outside, I cannot write about it, 'cause of NDA in the company.

its way too complex to get solid-state lithium batteries working, and we've already been working on the problem for at least two decades:




And we still haven't found a viable solution amongst all those attempts!

And, more pressing, the fact that Lithium Iron Phosphate has most of the benefits of solid state (cheaper, wont self-ignite, no cobalt, and have a much longer lifetime), all while already being available on Tesla model 3, and Ford Lightning!

Even if Solid State were suddenly solved tomorrow, you have to almost double the capacity of iron phosphate to make any inroads - the entire cheap EV industry in China has already chosen iron.
Your bolded text is simply NOT TRUE. ;)

it's a bit off topic, but come on Toyota. This was the company that pioneered with the Prius, then decided to do nothing with it, then bet on hydrogen, and then decided to end that and leave their customers holding the baby, then came back to electric only to fail in the most spectacular of ways and again to bad for the idiots that bought them, and now his back on hydrogen, one has to wonder what will be the result :D

back on topic, no batteries and all the bad it does and the problems sourcing materials, more range, faster charging, you'd actually think this is a no brainer.
This about Prius & Toyota, is simply not true...as it pawed the way for all hybrid Toyota vehicles.
Yes, they are pawing the way with hydrogen, now that Honda has pulled the plug with their FCX model. Now that was a f.u. with a car, that has almost no service or stations to fill.

Do you even understand the Automotive industry, 'cause you sure are not working in it!
 
Joined
Mar 21, 2016
Messages
2,508 (0.79/day)
If they could scale it down and make it safe and affordable for bikes/motorcycles it would be rad. You're not suppose to hit people on bikes anyway so if you do enjoy your complimentary gift package.
 
Joined
Apr 24, 2020
Messages
2,717 (1.61/day)
If they could scale it down and make it safe and affordable for bikes/motorcycles it would be rad. You're not suppose to hit people on bikes anyway so if you do enjoy your complimentary gift package.

I'm a big fan of Hydrogen, but given our current understanding of it, it seems impossible to scale down.

My big hopes is for large vehicles: trucks, trains, busses. I have little hope for projects like Toyota's Mirai (smaller cars), let alone very small vehicles like motorcycles. I welcome the attempts of course, but I just have very low expectations of them.
 
Joined
Mar 21, 2016
Messages
2,508 (0.79/day)
I don't know there were plenty of things that seemed far out of reach and then suddenly they weren't. Honestly the large vehicles is probably one of the safer starting points where it can make a good bit of sense, but regulation is going to be critical for anything hydrogen related of this sorta no matter what it is. I think society is going to need to evolve it's ways of doing things over the next coming decades in lots of ways if it wants to continue to sustain itself.
 
Joined
Aug 6, 2020
Messages
729 (0.46/day)
My big hopes is for large vehicles: trucks, trains, busses. I have little hope for projects like Toyota's Mirai (smaller cars), let alone very small vehicles like motorcycles. I welcome the attempts of course, but I just have very low expectations of them.


Why even bother with hydrogen pumps for trucks/buses in the first place? If you're already paying the gargantuan cost of re-manufacturing fuel tanks that only last 100k miles, plus the cost of compressing all that hydrogen, you might as well pay the small overhead of combining carbon monoxide plus h2 to get stable syngas that will replace methane already used in buses/trucks with carbon-neutral replacements?

And here's a viable container ship proving how much easier CNG is to deal with onboard (not to mention, easily shipped over existing pipelines, - plus seamless operation once you switch the source to syngas plants from h2 electrolysis)

Even if it takes us decades to switch to carbon-neutral, it will sill be mountains lower greenhouse /emissionsthan the diesel current used in trucks, trains ansd the fuell oil used in ships.


 
Joined
Apr 24, 2020
Messages
2,717 (1.61/day)
Why even bother with hydrogen pumps for trucks/buses in the first place? If you're already paying the gargantuan cost of re-manufacturing fuel tanks that only last 100k miles, plus the cost of compressing all that hydrogen, you might as well pay the small overhead of combining carbon monoxide plus h2 to get stable syngas that will replace methane already used in buses/trucks with carbon-neutral replacements?

Because fuel cell H2 trucks/busses benefit from regenerative braking and any benefits from the electric-car industry. Which are substantial efficiency savings compared to traditional gasoline engines. That's the thing: H2 Fuel Cells are electric engines, just with H2 as the fuel. Every singular electric engine benefit (regenerative braking, advanced motors, etc. etc.) is 100% applied to H2 Fuel Cells.

-------

Like everyone's talking about "battery swap would be so nice if it were figured out". Guess what? They figured it out. H2 is the battery. Fill er up at a H2 pump. H2 Fuel cells is a well designed, electric, fuel-swap engine.
 
Joined
Aug 6, 2020
Messages
729 (0.46/day)
Because fuel cell H2 trucks/busses benefit from regenerative braking and any benefits from the electric-car industry. Which are substantial efficiency savings compared to traditional gasoline engines. That's the thing: H2 Fuel Cells are electric engines, just with H2 as the fuel. Every singular electric engine benefit (regenerative braking, advanced motors, etc. etc.) is 100% applied to H2 Fuel Cells.

-------


cause obviously, a methane hybrid is beyond science?


wold you actually care to join the discussion, or do you just plan ion finding new ways to get the discussion completely off-topic
 
Joined
Apr 24, 2020
Messages
2,717 (1.61/day)
cause obviously, a methane hybrid is beyond science?


Interesting. Didn't know they got syngas practical outside of airplanes.

I'm willing to hedge on both H2 and Syngas. Both seem like decent tech, but I've heard more wins in the H2 world more recently. The main benefit of H2 is that its a "purer" form of energy compared to Syngas (ie: Syngas needs H2 as an input, as well as a condensed form of CO2 from somewhere).

H2 itself must be mass produced before Syngas is a reasonable solution. So it seems "simpler" to use H2 to me? But if Syngas (which has volume-density benefits) is more practical, then of course we should use that instead.
 
Joined
Aug 6, 2020
Messages
729 (0.46/day)
Interesting. Didn't know they got syngas practical outside of airplanes.

I'm willing to hedge on both H2 and Syngas. Both seem like decent tech, but I've heard more wins in the H2 world more recently. The main benefit of H2 is that its a "purer" form of energy compared to Syngas (ie: Syngas needs H2 as an input, as well as a condensed form of CO2 from somewhere).

H2 itself must be mass produced before Syngas is a reasonable solution. So it seems "simpler" to use H2 to me? But if Syngas (which has volume-density benefits) is more practical, then of course we should use that instead.


of course. but its not that much harder to create syngas from a local tank of h2, rather than figure out to transport the high-enough-density h2 (10k psi) that can natively be used as a fuel in a Mirai

bonus: once you create syngas, its a lot cheaper to keep contained than raw hydrogen (and already has tons of pipelines)

the only use case for raw hydrogen from electrolysis is making carbon-free steel; every other use case is better served by combining it wit some carbon-oxide
 
Last edited:
Joined
Apr 24, 2020
Messages
2,717 (1.61/day)
the only use case for raw hydrogen from electrolysis is making carbon-free steel; every other use case is better served by combining it wit some carbon-oxide

Erm, green ammonia (NH3)? Aka the step before fertilizer? There's no carbon in Fertilizer.

The world uses 180+ Million tons of ammonia, 80% of which is used to make the food that you and I eat every day.

The transition to green-ammonia / electrolysis based Hydrogen Fertilizer is going to happen to improve our food economy and allow us the future of farming. The scale of Hydrogen production must grow to sustain our farms, and doing so in a green manner through electrolysis would be best.
 
Joined
Aug 21, 2015
Messages
1,728 (0.51/day)
Location
North Dakota
System Name Office
Processor Ryzen 5600G
Motherboard ASUS B450M-A II
Cooling be quiet! Shadow Rock LP
Memory 16GB Patriot Viper Steel DDR4-3200
Video Card(s) Gigabyte RX 5600 XT
Storage PNY CS1030 250GB, Crucial MX500 2TB
Display(s) Dell S2719DGF
Case Fractal Define 7 Compact
Power Supply EVGA 550 G3
Mouse Logitech M705 Marthon
Keyboard Logitech G410
Software Windows 10 Pro 22H2
Erm, green ammonia (NH3)? Aka the step before fertilizer? There's no carbon in Fertilizer.

The world uses 180+ Million tons of ammonia, 80% of which is used to make the food that you and I eat every day.

The transition to green-ammonia / electrolysis based Hydrogen Fertilizer is going to happen to improve our food economy and allow us the future of farming. The scale of Hydrogen production must grow to sustain our farms, and doing so in a green manner through electrolysis would be best.

Does that come back around to H2O at some point? One of the attractions of fuel cells is that you get water back in the end.
 
Joined
Apr 24, 2020
Messages
2,717 (1.61/day)
Does that come back around to H2O at some point? One of the attractions of fuel cells is that you get water back in the end.

So fertilizer needs H2 (Hydrogen), to make NH3 (Ammonia), which then does a bunch of other steps to make fertilizer (ex: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ammonium_nitrate, aka NH4NO3, one kind of fertilizer)

Today is a big process in optimizing the H2 process so that we don't use natural gas or other fossil fuels anymore. Effectively, we were "turning chemical energy" into the energy that plants needed to grow quickly.

This all relates back to H2 as fuel, because as H2 becomes mass produced anyway (we need to get our food chain off of fossil fuels), it turns out that its a pretty good "battery" solution. So instead of pumping H2 into N2 (Nitrogen from the air) to make NH3, we pump H2 into O2 (also from the air) in a fuel cell to move a car forward, making H2O.
 
Joined
May 17, 2021
Messages
3,005 (2.32/day)
Processor Ryzen 5 5700x
Motherboard B550 Elite
Cooling Thermalright Perless Assassin 120 SE
Memory 32GB Fury Beast DDR4 3200Mhz
Video Card(s) Gigabyte 3060 ti gaming oc pro
Storage Samsung 970 Evo 1TB, WD SN850x 1TB, plus some random HDDs
Display(s) LG 27gp850 1440p 165Hz 27''
Case Lian Li Lancool II performance
Power Supply MSI 750w
Mouse G502
So fertilizer needs H2 (Hydrogen), to make NH3 (Ammonia), which then does a bunch of other steps to make fertilizer (ex: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ammonium_nitrate, aka NH4NO3, one kind of fertilizer)

Today is a big process in optimizing the H2 process so that we don't use natural gas or other fossil fuels anymore. Effectively, we were "turning chemical energy" into the energy that plants needed to grow quickly.

This all relates back to H2 as fuel, because as H2 becomes mass produced anyway (we need to get our food chain off of fossil fuels), it turns out that its a pretty good "battery" solution. So instead of pumping H2 into N2 (Nitrogen from the air) to make NH3, we pump H2 into O2 (also from the air) in a fuel cell to move a car forward, making H2O.

You're going round in circles, you need a fuel source to get hydrogen. Hydrogen in itself is not a fuel source, you need one to produce hydrogen.
 
Joined
Apr 24, 2020
Messages
2,717 (1.61/day)
You're going round in circles, you need a fuel source to get hydrogen. Hydrogen in itself is not a fuel source, you need one to produce hydrogen.
Solar, wind and nuclear.

Which match well with H2 electrolysis because you can turn the H2 plants off when the grid is stressed, effectively turning H2 into a battery that should use largely off-peak electricity (ie: 12noon electricity from solar, and 2am energy from nuclear).

H2 is best because 2am energy is cheaper than 7pm energy.

------

The grid stabilization problem is now the most critical problem, now that solar and nuclear offer enough electricity.
 

Count von Schwalbe

nocturnum moderatum
Staff member
Joined
Nov 15, 2021
Messages
3,114 (2.79/day)
Location
Knoxville, TN, USA
System Name Work Computer | Unfinished Computer
Processor Core i7-6700 | Ryzen 5 5600X
Motherboard Dell Q170 | Gigabyte Aorus Elite Wi-Fi
Cooling A fan? | Truly Custom Loop
Memory 4x4GB Crucial 2133 C17 | 4x8GB Corsair Vengeance RGB 3600 C26
Video Card(s) Dell Radeon R7 450 | RTX 2080 Ti FE
Storage Crucial BX500 2TB | TBD
Display(s) 3x LG QHD 32" GSM5B96 | TBD
Case Dell | Heavily Modified Phanteks P400
Power Supply Dell TFX Non-standard | EVGA BQ 650W
Mouse Monster No-Name $7 Gaming Mouse| TBD
carbon-free steel
I would encourage you to restate that. "Steel with reduced carbon emissions" is a little more accurate, as steel is iron alloyed with carbon.
 

Space Lynx

Astronaut
Joined
Oct 17, 2014
Messages
17,336 (4.68/day)
Location
Kepler-186f
Processor 7800X3D -25 all core
Cooling Frost Commander 140
Video Card(s) Merc 310 7900 XT @3100 core -.75v
Power Supply Corsair RM850x Gold
30 Hydrogen trains have been ordered for delivery to USA by a company called Stadler. Read this yesterday, seems really interesting. Honestly, I think this is great. Hydrogen should be focused in certain areas, EV in other areas, solar powered cars like Aptera in super sunny regions of the world, and so on and so forth. A targeted approach seems to be very smart imo. The idea everyone should be one or the other is a mistake, it should all depend on your region imo.

Also, the first hydrogen train in Germany is already up and running.


edit: mods it's kind of on topic, the hydrogen train, technically will be hauling train cars... :roll:
 
Last edited:
Joined
Aug 22, 2019
Messages
185 (0.10/day)
System Name Donnager
Processor 13900KS, lapped and contact frame
Motherboard Asus Z790 Hero
Cooling Heatkiller IV CPU block, Heatkiller V GPU block, GTX 480mm radiator, D5 pump
Memory 32GB Kingston Fury 7200C38
Video Card(s) eVGA RTX 3080Ti FTW3
Storage Optane 380GB M.2 OS drive, M.2 2TB game drive
Display(s) Alienware 34" Ultrawide 120Hz 3440x1440
Case Fractal Meshify 2 XL
Audio Device(s) Outlaw RR2150 stereo receiver driving DIY kits, Schiit Asgard for Sennheiser HD6XX headphones
Power Supply Seasonic Prime 1000W
Top