Aquinus
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The article says:The world’s biggest hydrogen fuel cell EV has started work in South Africa
Green hydrogen is made on-site to power the enormous truck’s fuel cells.arstechnica.com
Interesting article here, this makes a lot of sense for hydrogen.
Unless it's being done under high heat and high pressure like those that use waste heat from nuclear plants, it's bound to not be that efficient. This is the way to do it though, using some renewable source to create the H2. Photovoltaic solar is probably better for something like pumped storage though as there fewer losses compared to run of the mill electrolysis. Something like nuclear power is probably the best way to electrolyze water to make H2 because the reactor provides both the electricity to run the electrolyzer, but also the heat to improve efficiency (it also doesn't stop when the sun goes down.) For those that don't know, electrolysis is fairly efficient at really high temperatures and pressures and reduces the amount of power needed to produce H2. This is not anywhere near STP or what you would encounter in nature on Earth though, hence nuclear being a good choice.Of course, the hydrogen has to come from somewhere, which is why Anglo American will make it on-site using a 3.5 MW electrolyzer, with electricity coming from a 100 MW solar array. When fully operational, it should be capable of producing up to a metric ton of hydrogen a day.
With that said though, something like a combo of photovoltaic and thermal solar could have a similar result in theory, but it doesn't sound like that's what this company is planning on doing since parabolic mirrors that move with the sun tend to cost more than stationary panels do. I'm still not sold on the idea that hydrogen is a good way to store energy. Even if we do manage to produce it efficently at scale without breaking the bank, there are a lot of safety considerations with hydrogen considering how volatile and reactive it is.
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