Toyota's Developing A Hydrogen Combustion Engine!

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 19. 06. 2024
  • Could Toyota's hydrogen engine save combustion by converting engines?
    Subscribe to Engineering Explained for more videos! - goo.gl/VZstk7
    Recommended Books & Car Products - amzn.to/2BrekJm
    EE Shirts! - bit.ly/2BHsiuo
    Toyota has developed a hydrogen combustion engine with nearly negligible harmful emissions. The project involved a Toyota Corolla Sport which participated in a 24 hour endurance race, using a 1.6L turbo inline three-cylinder out of the GR Yaris. The idea was to convert a gasoline engine to a hydrogen engine, as an alternative to creating new electric cars. With hydrogen combustion, oxygen and hydrogen are burned, providing useful work, with water as the only main emissions.
    Naoaki Ito, one of the lead engineers on the project, puts it well: “For this hydrogen-powered engine, the engine itself remains the same as before. Our concept for this project was to create a hydrogen engine by using as much of the existing internal combustion technology as possible. We thought that achieving this would enable the conversion of existing car engines to hydrogen, providing a powerful weapon in the quest for carbon neutrality.”
    Related Videos:
    Hydrogen Engines = Bad Idea - • Why Hydrogen Engines A...
    Gas vs Hydrogen Engines - • The Difference Between...
    Hydrogen Rotary Engine - • Mazda Built A Hydrogen...
    References:
    Toyota Hydrogen Press Release - global.toyota/en/newsroom/cor...
    Toyota Hydrogen Conversion - toyotatimes.jp/en/insidetoyot...
    Toyota 24 Hour Race Results - toyotatimes.jp/en/insidetoyot...
    Hydrogen Combustion Methods - www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/9/22/4842
    Hydrogen Carbon Emissions - www.avl.com/documents/4053291...
    Gas Carbon Emissions - climatekids.nasa.gov/review/c...
    JRC Well-To-Wheels Report - publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu...
    Hydrogen Production Costs - doi.org/10.1016/j.rser.2016.0...
    Mirai Fuel Tank Weight - insideevs.com/news/323973/toy...
    Engineering Explained is a participant in the Amazon Influencer Program.
    Don't forget to check out my other pages below!
    Instagram: / engineeringexplained
    Facebook: / engineeringexplained
    Twitter: / jasonfenske13
    EE Extra: / @engineeringexplainede...
  • Auta a dopravní prostředky

Komentáře • 7K

  • @tomkar013
    @tomkar013 Před 3 lety +902

    It’ll be a great day when engineering explained starts using the metric system

    • @AG-gy7qq
      @AG-gy7qq Před 3 lety +41

      Let’s hope not

    • @hubster4477
      @hubster4477 Před 3 lety +12

      Why?

    • @houseking9211
      @houseking9211 Před 3 lety +148

      @@hubster4477 because the metric system is simply better

    • @hubster4477
      @hubster4477 Před 3 lety +28

      @@houseking9211 well how much better, and why. Look at all the huge buildings, dams, bridges, engines, etc that we've built using our system. Would the metric system make those things better, built in a shorter time, more sound design? Just asking, I would have been used to the metric system by now if around for the last 15 years. But I don't really care if I buy 2 liters of milk or a half gallon.

    • @TermlessHGW
      @TermlessHGW Před 3 lety +39

      Haha totally! But American education system prevents that!

  • @Salvaba
    @Salvaba Před 3 lety +1815

    “25% load, meaning you would need very large engines to make good power” sooo another 8.0L v10 hydrogen viper?

    • @bigbones916
      @bigbones916 Před 3 lety +312

      with all the power of a 4 cylinder corolla!!

    • @cryptikreap795
      @cryptikreap795 Před 3 lety +163

      @@bigbones916 if your really lucky. Strap a turbo to that viper. Let it rev to 10k and you'll start getting closer to an impreza

    • @TKUA11
      @TKUA11 Před 3 lety +80

      Or we could just use gasoline engines. Why are we trying to reinvent the wheel?

    • @danielsatko-
      @danielsatko- Před 3 lety +64

      @Benjamin Smith dude koenigsegg makes 600hp from three cylinder engine

    • @seraanimsti3816
      @seraanimsti3816 Před 3 lety +38

      @@danielsatko- he’s not wrong tho, the most powerful “4cyl” in the world, while the gemera is a 3cyl engine @,@

  • @chrisguest3452
    @chrisguest3452 Před rokem +13

    early days, consider what we had for when the batteries (lead acid) and electric motors were at the time. using H2 in a car is still pretty new

    • @punker4Real
      @punker4Real Před rokem

      normal Carb engines will run hydergen out of the box only needs minor mods to fix backfires

  • @ameraljabr405
    @ameraljabr405 Před 2 lety +1

    All other videos out there briefly touch the surface of the topic.
    This is an outstanding work supported by scientific research papers.
    Really awesome work

  • @pjay3028
    @pjay3028 Před 3 lety +618

    Very interesting. But I think Toyota needs a lot of respect for trying all these different options, they seem to really care about ICE fans. I appreciate that.

    • @MuitoDaora
      @MuitoDaora Před 3 lety +38

      Battery production capacity is the problem. Huge amount of investments needed and a big cut over their profits because of the battery cost in each car. Hydrogen combustion engines would maintain a bigger piece of the pie.
      Money is always what they care about.

    • @vinigretzky97
      @vinigretzky97 Před 3 lety +71

      @@MuitoDaora It's not what "they" care about.
      Hydrogen ICE simply makes more sense and is way better for the environment if you take into account the whole process chain of regular EVs.
      Plus the ICE has been developed and optimized for decades now, it would be a total waste to throw it all away and start fresh.
      Reinventing the wheel never works.

    • @pjay3028
      @pjay3028 Před 3 lety +9

      @@MuitoDaora if you're correct, why don't they simply take the money they're investing in hydrogen power and channel it into battery production so they get all the pie?

    • @MuitoDaora
      @MuitoDaora Před 3 lety +21

      ​@@vinigretzky97 I'm not defending EVs, just saying that money in their pocket is what matters.
      EVs are being pushed by regulators for their efficiency and possibility of not polluting the atmosphere by using renewable energy for the whole process but the mining problem persist.

    • @MuitoDaora
      @MuitoDaora Před 3 lety +8

      @@pjay3028 Because this experiment is dwarfed in comparison to build battery factories over the world. Even tesla has to use suppliers for their batteries.

  • @tashakamikarkori
    @tashakamikarkori Před 3 lety +362

    "Lets say you have a car that burns a quart of oil every 3000 miles"
    Me with an Audi 2.0TFSI: So you mean good oil economy

    • @Thevol40k
      @Thevol40k Před 3 lety +4

      Does 2.0 FSI still burns oil ? I know 2009-2011TFSI burned it but after that they changed piston rings.

    • @vulpes122
      @vulpes122 Před 3 lety +6

      @@Thevol40k Subaru FB20 engine burns 1 litre of oil every 2000km on my car.

    • @Mianhe
      @Mianhe Před 3 lety +3

      @@vulpes122 is that a rotary

    • @markahomer
      @markahomer Před 3 lety +4

      New engine: Audi should do about 10,000 miles. BMW practically 'zero' both in my experience.

    • @thewaldfe9763
      @thewaldfe9763 Před 3 lety +1

      So it's practically a diesel?

  • @NANDOFFDataRecovery
    @NANDOFFDataRecovery Před 2 lety +3

    Great video as always..
    Thanks for sharing

  • @h-j.k.8971
    @h-j.k.8971 Před 2 lety +7

    This was really good Jason. People don´t seem to realize how difficult Hydrogen power can be.

    • @stn7172
      @stn7172 Před 2 lety

      Stan Meyer made a hydrogen car in the 80s and was coincidentally killed by the gov

  • @usonumabeach300
    @usonumabeach300 Před 3 lety +125

    I remember reading about hydrogen powered vehicles in 11th grade chemistry... Im 38 now, 22 years later. Really feels like this technology went into stasis for 2 decades.

    • @redbandanacat6206
      @redbandanacat6206 Před 3 lety +39

      Hydrogen was always just a distraction by the oil lobby to slow down progress

    • @GeraldPUR
      @GeraldPUR Před 3 lety +22

      GM introduced its electric car back in the mid 80! Was killed off by the big gasoline Co's

    • @robc8468
      @robc8468 Před 3 lety +21

      Just because something can be done does not make it economically viable I put this hydrogen car stuff in the same category as asteroid mining. This stuff sounds impressive at Starbucks over coffee but its always the implementation and economics in the end that wins.

    • @deanchur
      @deanchur Před 3 lety +14

      @@GeraldPUR Electric car was first invented in the 1840's, first one to market beat the Benz Patentwagen by 2 years.

    • @DSAK55
      @DSAK55 Před 3 lety

      @@redbandanacat6206 EXACTLY

  • @zzanatos2001
    @zzanatos2001 Před 3 lety +176

    My son is an engineer and was involved in the development of the Toyota Mirai fuel cell. He is currently working on next generation solid-state battery technology for EVs. I'm really proud of him.

    • @HiveMynd
      @HiveMynd Před 3 lety +12

      That is Exactly what is Holding back EV's Right now, The Batteries. Solid State Batteries would be a Revolution in EV Tech as it would make them Lighter, Faster to Charge and give them a MUCH higher Range.
      I wish your son the best of luck in his research because I am absolutely Impatient to see Solid State Batteries become Mainstream

    • @imdrunken
      @imdrunken Před 3 lety +7

      Except all methods of producing solid state batteries takes huge amounts of power and mining....which leads you back to not really making a difference

    • @sathusan2008
      @sathusan2008 Před 3 lety +1

      Respect

    • @zzanatos2001
      @zzanatos2001 Před 3 lety +10

      @@imdrunken Those are the very issues he's working to solve - along with eliminating dendrite formation in solid state batteries. He has a PhD from the Colorado School of Mines, and he works in Golden at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory.

    • @imdrunken
      @imdrunken Před 3 lety +6

      @@zzanatos2001 good luck to him, but I doubt he will be breaking the laws of thermodynamics or conservation of energy any time soon. All solutions come with a whole new set of problems....none of which have ever negated the problems. Just spread them out or separated them by multiple manufacturing processes or other necessary thing to make these new "solutions" work.

  • @superpoon16
    @superpoon16 Před rokem

    Thank you for in detail data ,the math and clear easy understand explanation. Keep up the good work. 👍 🙂

  • @pacoflyer
    @pacoflyer Před rokem +64

    I think the tank weight is still lighter than battery weight. Be interesting to see the weight difference and possible environment impacts.

    • @timogronroos4642
      @timogronroos4642 Před rokem +1

      With a 500Wh per 1 kg battery (CATL) coming out, a 100 kWh battery would weigh 200kg. BEV batteries are developing very fast. There's no real hope for hydrogen to win in small vehicles. Ships, trains, and maybe trucks, could have some use. But that 500Wh is the level where the game is also over for long-range trucks. A Freightliner consumes about 150 kW per 100km. That would be 300 kg. A 3 000 kg battery would give a 1 000 km range for that truck. 3 000 kg is not that much extra weight when you consider all the other tech you don't need anymore like a huge combustion engine, fuel tank, emissions systems, etc.

    • @danielmalmeida1
      @danielmalmeida1 Před rokem +1

      @@timogronroos4642 non-sense…

    • @sigmamale4147
      @sigmamale4147 Před rokem +1

      @@timogronroos4642 lol ice vehicles weigh on average 200kg less than evs. That battery is heavier than the entire power train

    • @ViihdeJukat
      @ViihdeJukat Před rokem +1

      @@sigmamale4147 Whats funny? Weight is not a issue for weighter as it can tow several TONS weight behind. And eu is giving electric trucks to carry 5 tons more so batterywights is not a issue.

    • @sigmamale4147
      @sigmamale4147 Před rokem +1

      @@ViihdeJukat HAHAHAHA weight isnt an issue ? Guess what they could have done with that extra 3 tons ? Haul merchandise and actual products !

  • @Str8RippinGaming
    @Str8RippinGaming Před 3 lety +480

    Lets say you burn oil every 3k miles... *Me a AP1 owner* "right right..."

    • @rimckd825
      @rimckd825 Před 3 lety +6

      What is an AP1 ?

    • @charlieellis8777
      @charlieellis8777 Před 3 lety +38

      @@rimckd825 it’s a honda s2k

    • @pedrofernandez8729
      @pedrofernandez8729 Před 3 lety +5

      As the previous owner of a 1998 Corolla, "That's nothing, man!"

    • @jonwebb9261
      @jonwebb9261 Před 3 lety +11

      Don’t hate on Hondas self-replenishing oil system!

    • @jthomp997
      @jthomp997 Před 3 lety +9

      I'm a subaru owner with a blown head gasket... my oil goes below the dip stick about 250 miles after filling it up

  • @siimojapalu5266
    @siimojapalu5266 Před 3 lety +741

    Going to the 24h race Toyota was actually trying to find out the issues that the engine was having. It was much easier for them to find out.

    • @dylantroutman4363
      @dylantroutman4363 Před 3 lety +20

      I could have tested that out on the street.... They don't own a single track?

    • @diavalus
      @diavalus Před 3 lety +16

      @@dylantroutman4363 It seems they don't have a track for properly testing the cars

    • @kressy
      @kressy Před 3 lety +9

      @@dylantroutman4363 fuji speedway is their track

    • @mezo72271
      @mezo72271 Před 3 lety +16

      @@kressy and didn't toyota just built Japan's own Nürburgring recently?

    • @PhysicxAlmighty
      @PhysicxAlmighty Před 3 lety +35

      @@kressy That´s their racetrack, yes. Testing cars however is done at the new Toyota Technical Center Shimoyama.

  • @anthonyteis8570
    @anthonyteis8570 Před rokem

    I write for sustainability publications and I just needed the science on this engine and I needed it quickly - thank you so much for this brilliant video!

  • @bobmorgan5636
    @bobmorgan5636 Před rokem +11

    Electric cars are not the ultimate gift to humanity.

    • @EliasGydesen
      @EliasGydesen Před 2 měsíci +4

      Yes the Ultimate gift is the banana 😂

    • @ehaurader2640
      @ehaurader2640 Před měsícem +1

      Banana powered cars
      Edit: water tank -> HHO generator -> air compressor -> engine

  • @tomcavanaugh5237
    @tomcavanaugh5237 Před 2 lety +456

    I've been waiting, since 1978, for hydrogen combustion vehicles, thanks to an over-enthusiastic high school physics teacher.

    • @jacklondon6716
      @jacklondon6716 Před 2 lety +2

      Merkel had a hydrogen internal combustion Presidential BMW for years.
      But its only for her, nobody else...

    • @MauriatOttolink
      @MauriatOttolink Před 2 lety +13

      Tom Cavanaugh
      He must have been such a good guy to know!
      They always say that you never forget a good teacher!
      Lucky you! He/she will have inspired you with the same enthusiasm. Mine came from a guy with a little corner electrical and radio repair shop who recognised my teenage interest in radio and fired me up. ...
      If YOU get the chance..put something back. It's VERY rewarding.

    • @mpadlite2925
      @mpadlite2925 Před 2 lety +2

      @Terry Winter Who (i.e. what's the source) says that electrical vehicles are more expensive and pollute more than conventional internal combustion vehicles ? Especially when evaluated over vehicle lifetime ?
      Would very much like to "read up" on that but have not seen any reliable and credible material... No lack of opinions and speculations though!
      Best regards

    • @mpadlite2925
      @mpadlite2925 Před 2 lety +10

      @Terry Winter
      Which type of batteries are worse than what, and under which presumed circumstances ?
      General "declarations" whitout more precise specifications are unfortunately of no use when one wants to investigate and understand factual problems and their circumstances...
      Short (and often blusterous) simplifications might appear to be great soundbites and might even be in accordance with current findings. But they might just as well be mere slogans minted by some "interested party", and due to their brief and nebulous nature there is no proper way to determine which is the case, which renders them totally useless to anyone who is looking to actually inform them selves on an issue.
      Best regards

    • @melb5996
      @melb5996 Před 2 lety +11

      @@mpadlite2925 it looks like you are blindfolding yourself. The most common batteries used in EVs are totally reliant on RARE minerals. 80% suppled by China. Prices will NOT fall as the clue is in the word RARE. Not to mention the appalling condition that some people are experiencing mining Cobalt. Before sounding off at others please share your ‘expert’ knowledge and explain what YOU think is a win win battery.

  • @nic7nic
    @nic7nic Před 3 lety +231

    Im so happy that you include NOx, as many oversee this.

    • @captainnavi6546
      @captainnavi6546 Před 3 lety +9

      Don't u ruin my one hope of driving a V8 in my old age days.

    • @robertbennett2796
      @robertbennett2796 Před 3 lety +2

      Thats why gas cars have a catalytic converters wonder how they use a catalytic converter on this type of fuel

    • @Tron-Jockey
      @Tron-Jockey Před 3 lety +1

      @@captainnavi6546 - Spoken like a person that has never driven a performance electric. If you like big V8s then you're almost certainly attracted to it because of its huge torque numbers and the fact that it can generate that torque low in the RPM band. Well, if you love loads of torque that comes on quick then you need to experience something with typically twice the torque of the average V8. You owe it to yourself to test drive a Tesla Model "S" or a Porsche Taycan (just to be able to objectively critique them if for no other reason). The instant levels of MASSIVE torque created at virtually zero RPM is absolutely intoxicating. You won't be able to keep your foot out of it.

    • @vinigretzky97
      @vinigretzky97 Před 3 lety +1

      Aint a problem if you make the einge two-stroke.

    • @chiknj23
      @chiknj23 Před 3 lety +8

      @@Tron-Jockey There's no sound tho

  • @garyevans5335
    @garyevans5335 Před 2 lety

    Excellent presentation. Very informative, thank you.

  • @robertdufour2456
    @robertdufour2456 Před 2 lety +4

    This is an amazing presentation! I was much more hopeful for hydrogen . . .
    Anyway, thank you for this insightful and thorough video!

  • @cidercreekranch
    @cidercreekranch Před 3 lety +138

    The double bonds between the C and Os are a nice touch.

    • @EngineeringExplained
      @EngineeringExplained  Před 3 lety +132

      Not tryna brag but I might have taken chem 101. 💁‍♂️

    • @datgamerboy123
      @datgamerboy123 Před 3 lety +11

      @@EngineeringExplained I took Chem back in grade 11. I love Chem, but man I nearly failed! It got way more difficult than I expected it to.

    • @madoba8717
      @madoba8717 Před 3 lety +15

      @@EngineeringExplained damn Jason leave some knowledge for the rest of us!

    • @davidhollenshead4892
      @davidhollenshead4892 Před 3 lety +13

      @@EngineeringExplained You left out one big issue, as Hydrogen slowly weakens the metals by bonding with them in a similar way that Oxygen does to steel. Which makes the pistons, cylinder head & block brittle over time. There was a test Mail Jeep [DJ series] that was built to burn Hydrogen but the engine lasted something like 10K miles and the pistons lasted even less. Unfortunately, this wasn't on the web, despite being in the newspapers in the pre-internet days...

    • @AtlasReburdened
      @AtlasReburdened Před 3 lety +6

      @@davidhollenshead4892 Hadn't thought about that in spite of my time as an industrial welder. Hydrogen embrittlement is a pretty big deal.

  • @QuakeGamerROTMG
    @QuakeGamerROTMG Před 3 lety +224

    "Let's say you burn 1 quart of oil every three thousand miles..."
    "Yep that's me with my 25 year old Honda B series engine"
    "... And my fellow enthusiasts of old Hondas and Subarus you know what this life is like"
    This was a magical and painful moment in the video

    • @pw9021
      @pw9021 Před 3 lety +4

      25yr. old Honda's ass! Honda continued this fine legacy in the 2012 (Gen 2) Acura MDX.

    • @brkbtjunkie
      @brkbtjunkie Před 3 lety +1

      @@pw9021 uhhh he didn’t say that was the only engine that ate oil…

    • @Knightlyfrog
      @Knightlyfrog Před 3 lety +1

      Laughs in 2az-fe

    • @hemiplow1297
      @hemiplow1297 Před 3 lety +1

      Hehe,98 corolla here 1 qt every 400 miles

    • @vqnismo.knight903
      @vqnismo.knight903 Před 3 lety

      Vq's have entered the chat 😗

  • @finecutpost
    @finecutpost Před 2 lety +3

    With the amount of research you do for these video's do you actually have time to sleep? I'm in awe of the amount of work you put into your video's. Thank you.

  • @kirankumarsr5465
    @kirankumarsr5465 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for your deep explanation....great job.....

  • @philippmayenburg7282
    @philippmayenburg7282 Před 3 lety +261

    man this is excactly the video i wanted to see

    • @bigbullstony43
      @bigbullstony43 Před 3 lety +7

      46km per stop is crazy. 35 stops is not good.
      It has to be green hydrogen in the 1st place and only 5% of current hydrogen production is green the rest is via Gas reforming.

    • @yesofcourse3324
      @yesofcourse3324 Před 3 lety +1

      YESSS

    • @toetz4491
      @toetz4491 Před 3 lety

      So do i

  • @UnnamedThe
    @UnnamedThe Před 3 lety +36

    I'm not letting "HCCI is difficult to control" count, because people have been cursing common rail injection as well, and now it's a staple in diesels. It's all a matter of development. I'm proud of Toyota for trying stuff here.

    • @IJMacfarlane
      @IJMacfarlane Před 3 lety

      I think it's because the properties of hydrogen are very different from diesel fuel.

    • @IJMacfarlane
      @IJMacfarlane Před 3 lety

      @@UnnamedThe Ah, I see your angle now. Good point.

    • @EngineeringExplained
      @EngineeringExplained  Před 3 lety +4

      That's fair, but this stuff has been researched for decades, and still not really any commercial applications. Lots of companies (VW, Mercedes, Nissan, Mazda, Honda, Hyundai, GM, and on and on) have put effort into research/development, but decades later still not large scale applications. Mazda seems closest with their SPCCI engines, but even that has been delayed for US release.

    • @Erowens98
      @Erowens98 Před 3 lety

      @@EngineeringExplained BEV's where also developed for decades before they became viable. And i'm sure we all know how long safe nuclear power plants too to develop. Long development time does not necessarily mean the potential can't be reached.

  • @stephen7218
    @stephen7218 Před 2 lety +35

    Battery production may be limited by shortage of raw materials. Green hydrogen could be a more sustainable source of energy for vehicles.

    • @gordesmihaela4635
      @gordesmihaela4635 Před rokem +1

      You use 48 kwh of electric energy to produce 1 kg of hydrogen. With that energy, you can drive 200 miles or 300 km in a Tesla. It's not enough efficient yet. Maximum ideal efficiency is 39 kwh/1 kg of Hydrogen, but not yet reached. For up to 500 km range, I believe that electric is the best option. Plus I can produce my own electricity. Hydrogen is just too much of a hassle. Unless, is really cheap. Probably in 15 years, will be different.

    • @TheArthrighteous
      @TheArthrighteous Před rokem +3

      @@gordesmihaela4635 You are assuming right now that windmills or solar panels arent going to get really expensive. We need to have a lot of options on energy, and honestly Hydrogen is just in the beginning phase of creation. EV's make sense for a commuter car. They do not make sense in freight, boating or airplanes. On a larger scale Hydrogen is honestly our best option in fueling the future and also keeping our same lifestyle.

    • @cookiecrumb1018
      @cookiecrumb1018 Před rokem +2

      @@gordesmihaela4635 no it isn't they found an easier way they use gallium and tin with room temperature and made hydrogen

    • @GuusKlaas
      @GuusKlaas Před rokem

      You're making a few important assumptions, and missing a few steps. As the video illustrated, hydrogen combustion itself is a dead horse, even with much higher pressure you can't bring enough hydrogen with you for it to be practical, and even at 700bar refilling is already so impractical that for every 7 minute refill, the station has to re-pressurise at least 15 minutes, meaining you can do at most 3 cars/hour/station. Which is less than a fast charger, which has a net higher energy efficiency to boot (not just the hydrogen takes a lot of energy, the infrastructure as well, like compressors, whereas that kind of stuff is minimal on electric). Purely on the rarity of energy alone hydrogen makes little sense.
      Another assumption you make is that the material shortage isn't an issue for hydrogen. It is an issue. FCEV's use a boatload. Not only because they essentially are EV's (the fuelcell can't "spike" as hard as a battery can, so every FCEV has a battery to boot, which albeit smaller, is still sizeable), but also because the fuel cell has a lot of rare, expensive materials in it. Heck, it has platina as a frigging consumable.
      Considering you can't get 700 bar of hydrogen on your driveway, but you can get AC current which you can easily load balance on top of it, and battery chemistries are not only diverse but constantly evolving (energy density doubled, and LFP is a no-cobalt viable technology already), and considering "vroom" even for hydrogen makes no sense... I'd say hydrogen and sustainable have no mix in personal vehicles.

  • @ashutoshsrivastava3618
    @ashutoshsrivastava3618 Před rokem +1

    EXCELLENT VIDEO ABOUT HYDROGEN BURNING IN ICE ENGINE. PROBLEM LIKE NO AND CO2 WERE NEVER TALKED IN OTHER VIDEO. GOOD JOB KEEP IT UP.

  • @ParadigmUnkn0wn
    @ParadigmUnkn0wn Před 3 lety +396

    "Burns a quart of oil every 3000 miles"
    Subaru owners: Those are rookie numbers!

    • @gw5479
      @gw5479 Před 3 lety +3

      Yep. Bout a quart per 1000, but she has moods.

    • @wayward03
      @wayward03 Před 3 lety +4

      None of the three subies I had burned really any oil, the modded WRX aspirated a little if I drove it like i stole it but that's it.

    • @curtisbacon7856
      @curtisbacon7856 Před 3 lety

      difference between burning and consumption

    • @andyeighttre
      @andyeighttre Před 3 lety +3

      I owned a 2.5 gt and a sti at the same time. Wife had a 2.5i legacy. We were the darling customers of Rotella T6 😬

    • @AliasProductions801
      @AliasProductions801 Před 2 lety +2

      My rotary burns less… lol

  • @ThomasNing
    @ThomasNing Před 3 lety +442

    Does this mean that hydrogen combustion spinning doritos are remotely theoretically possible now? 🤔

    • @rzyao64
      @rzyao64 Před 3 lety +59

      Mazda actually made a hydrogen powered RX8 available to Japan at one point

    • @ThomasNing
      @ThomasNing Před 3 lety +20

      @@rzyao64 crap you're right, I thought for some reason that his video 2 years ago concluded that hydrogen rotaries weren't really possible. Thanks for correcting me

    • @wumpusthehunted2628
      @wumpusthehunted2628 Před 3 lety +6

      Wouldn't you need multiple Doritos per rotor? Jason mentioned some pretty high compression ratios, the easiest I've heard is using a big rotor for initial compression and final expansion and a smaller one for final compression and initial expansion.
      Jason also made a video on why it isn't happening (Doritos in general, not multiple tricks or h2).

    • @machscga6238
      @machscga6238 Před 3 lety +6

      You can put the spinning Dorito on LPG... That will pass emissions

    • @Lawdog652
      @Lawdog652 Před 3 lety +6

      Liquid Piston engine. New rotary that can and does run on hydrogen. The channel Warped Perception just did a video on it.

  • @user-st4mz2es4i
    @user-st4mz2es4i Před 2 lety

    Well Done, Thank You! This was a Great Presentation. A lot of valuable information in a short concise overview/class. Yes, sometimes like getting a drink of water through a Firehose. I am subscribed and will be coming back to your channel.

  • @ronmccallister4068
    @ronmccallister4068 Před 2 lety

    Very well explained!!! Thank you.

  • @charliesimar7541
    @charliesimar7541 Před 2 lety +272

    This is the most concise explanation of the use of hydrogen in engines and in fuel cells I've ever seen. I've had a vague concept of this topic but this video brings it sharply in focus. Thanks!

    • @prafuitu
      @prafuitu Před 2 lety +3

      One problem though... This is not fuel cell technology. 🙂 This is just the classic, barbarian way of exploding things inside an internal combustion engine in order to produce mechanical energy. It "just" replaces gasoline/diesel/ethanol/whatever with hydrogen.
      Fuel cell technology is about reacting hydrogen and oxygen in an elegant, controlled manner, in order to produce electricity on demand which, in turn, powers an electric engine.

    • @rnp9876
      @rnp9876 Před 2 lety +16

      @@prafuitu barbaric?. If the goal is to avoid burning fossil fuels this is the best solution. Barbaric is the mining used to get Lithium to produce batteries.

    • @prafuitu
      @prafuitu Před 2 lety +2

      @@rnp9876 I was referring to the method used to convert fuel into energy, be it diesel, hydrogen or whatever.
      "Exploding" hydrogen in an ICE to produce mechanical power has roughly 30% efficiency while converting that same hydrogen into electricity in a fuel cell vehicle is, again, roughly, 60% efficient.
      That's why I called ICEs barbaric in comparison to fuel cells. BEVs (battery electric vehicles) were never mentioned by me, so your argument about lithium mining is irrelevant to this discussion.
      It's barbaric in the same way frantically hitting the drums is barbaric compared to gently drawing the bow across a violin's strings in order to produce sounds.

    • @rnp9876
      @rnp9876 Před 2 lety

      @@prafuitu EVs are not the solution. Fuel cell, probably and they are much better than battery only car, in my opinion.

    • @prafuitu
      @prafuitu Před 2 lety +2

      @@rnp9876 Fuel cell vehicles *are* EVs, but again, you're missing the point that hydrogen ICE (presented in this video) is not the same as hydrogen fuel cells, what the top comment claims.
      Anyway, to play your game:
      It looks to me that you read somewhere that Li mining is bad and from that you derived that EVs are bad when you clearly don't know what an EV is.
      To claim right now that EVs are bad just because the batteries technology is not optimal (when we're clearly in its early days and it has already hugely improved compared to just a few years back) is as shortsighted as saying that the ICE was bad compared to a steam engine because its efficiency was horrendous in the beginning.
      Things are improving at a rapid pace, motors are becoming more efficient, alternative ways of electricity production are in development or deployed every day (check the ITER project to see the mother of all energy plants), new energy storage solutions are researched all over the globe, including alternative battery chemistries like Iron oxide or Aluminium/air ...
      EVs might not be the present, but they sure are the future in either BEV form, FCEV form or any other form that we haven't even dreamt of yet!

  • @JohnnyWishbone85
    @JohnnyWishbone85 Před 3 lety +358

    *"Let's say you burn 1 quart of oil every three thousand miles..."*
    Legacy GT Owners: "Woah, really?"

    • @TedSchoenling
      @TedSchoenling Před 3 lety +19

      BMW Owners... 1 quart per 3K... Hold my beer.

    • @briandavis7226
      @briandavis7226 Před 3 lety +16

      my impreza goes through a 1 quart at most every 1k miles lol

    • @retropuffer2986
      @retropuffer2986 Před 3 lety +4

      @@briandavis7226 My friend's old impreza did the same.

    • @engrishsheep
      @engrishsheep Před 3 lety +7

      Really, I have a WRX with mods (e.g. bigger turbo, injectors, I/C...) with 290k miles and doesn't burn oil. (acutally, I lost maybe not even half a quart in 3k miles.)
      I think it's about the weight of oil you put in it. I use Rotella T6 5W-40 year around for years and no problems, beside some coolant leaks...

    • @hallodunase
      @hallodunase Před 3 lety +4

      Wait till you hear about electric vehicles!

  • @Jack-li5ww
    @Jack-li5ww Před 2 lety

    Thanks for the education. Good video.

  • @peterross2072
    @peterross2072 Před 2 lety +1

    This is Excellent news. I have always wondered why no-one was trying to run Hydrogen in a combustion engine. Thanks for the info.

    • @californiadreaming9216
      @californiadreaming9216 Před 2 lety

      Peter Ross the impediments which the oil giants have been putting on hydrogen...and electric...vehicles over the last 100 years is absolutely mind-blowing.

  • @vargasaidan7366
    @vargasaidan7366 Před 3 lety +632

    i hope mazda tries to make a hydrogen rotary race car. that would be so cool to see

    • @acters124
      @acters124 Před 3 lety +53

      I believe there is research done that showed hydrogen combined with gasoline EDIT:(2-10% combined). It is the most beneficial air- dual fuel ratio that had least amount emissions while getting an evened out and faster burn to ignite all of the fuel before it exhausts. I believe this was done In a rotary.

    • @F14Goose37
      @F14Goose37 Před 3 lety +8

      Are you saying that because you just thought it would be a good idea and do not know about H2 rotary engines, or because you know that Mazda has made rotaries that run on H2 before?

    • @scottyporteous
      @scottyporteous Před 3 lety +39

      Mazda did make a hydrogen powered RX8 race back when RX8's where new. You could buy in Japan only a duel fuel rx8 and it worked really well actually

    • @dulanawijeratne7518
      @dulanawijeratne7518 Před 3 lety +5

      Woahhhhhhhh. SO THERE'S HOPE?

    • @philip_james
      @philip_james Před 3 lety +33

      The rotary engine works really well with hydrogen because the inlet combustion and exhaust all occur in different areas of the chamber unlike a piston engine which all occurs in the same place in the cylinder

  • @numb450
    @numb450 Před 3 lety +43

    Hydrogen ICE:
    -Vroom sounds
    -Manual trans
    -fast refuel
    -powered by explosions
    Electric
    - silent
    -no manual
    -slow charging
    -not powered by explosions
    I hope the downsides of hydrogen ICE get sorted

    • @SidewaysN
      @SidewaysN Před 3 lety +2

      Hydrogen refueling as it exists now is not fast

    • @thewoode1050
      @thewoode1050 Před 3 lety

      You mean the tendency to explode? 🤔

    • @GgDBXS
      @GgDBXS Před 3 lety +2

      @@thewoode1050 Compressing takes time. My CNG car used to "charging" 30-40 minutes if compressor on filling station was weak. And CNG have only 200 bar, not 700.

    • @paytyler
      @paytyler Před 3 lety +2

      Vroom sounds and heat is energy escaping from your ICE without doing any usable work.

    • @thewoode1050
      @thewoode1050 Před 3 lety +1

      @@GgDBXS No, I was referring to the tendency of Hydrogen to form very explosive mixtures with air. So a small leak and very tiny spark can lead to a proper explosion

  • @bigkingsean1330
    @bigkingsean1330 Před rokem

    Very interesting, thank you for the info.

  • @mariopires2000
    @mariopires2000 Před rokem

    Thanks for a very useful explanation!

  • @marcelscott6358
    @marcelscott6358 Před 2 lety +98

    I experimented a little with converting my 4L inline petrol car to HHO, I was converting the water to gas in the car.
    The two biggest hurdles I had was spare electricity, and upper cylinder lube.
    I estimate about 130amps @ 12V to make a steady flow of hydrogen and run on average 2000rpm.
    Upper cylinder lube could be solved by using an engine converted to LPG only.
    Also if you only partial supply (I only ran 20amps@12V) to get better fuel efficiency you will need to spoof your oxygen sensor in exhaust. The cleaner exhaust will make the ECU think it running lean and enrich the tuning and won't use less fuel.

    • @tomkeegan3782
      @tomkeegan3782 Před 2 lety +12

      You should make a video about that.

    • @ChronicEye
      @ChronicEye Před 2 lety +1

      that sounds like a headache

    • @willg125
      @willg125 Před 2 lety +5

      I'd love to hear more about this

    • @marcelscott6358
      @marcelscott6358 Před 2 lety +14

      @@willg125 I also found that I only got about 10,000km out of my plates before they had oxidized to much. I used stainless 3.16, marine grade steel. Also my water got dirty and had to replace it about every 1,500km. I had 4 litre reservoir.
      I used a teaspoon of baking soda mixed in my distilled water.
      hope this helps.

    • @slevinchannel7589
      @slevinchannel7589 Před 2 lety +1

      @@tomkeegan3782 Random af question: Want some science-channel to check out, cause the
      learning never ends? I got some.

  • @arnemart
    @arnemart Před 3 lety +684

    Toyota will apparently do absolutely everything to avoid just making electric cars

    • @joelblanco1800
      @joelblanco1800 Před 3 lety +232

      The engine is the soul of a car

    • @m4dc4t
      @m4dc4t Před 3 lety +189

      They're going the right way. It will possibly never be economical but it is the way to keep the ice alive for motorsports.

    • @ItsAlive111
      @ItsAlive111 Před 3 lety +77

      They defend their advantages in ICE reliability compared to other manufacturers

    • @PerBuer
      @PerBuer Před 3 lety +180

      @@joelblanco1800 Pfft. A car without a horse in front of it has no soul at all.

    • @YourAssAintSafe
      @YourAssAintSafe Před 3 lety +18

      Reliability that's why

  • @pudjodewo
    @pudjodewo Před 10 měsíci

    Very interesting, thanks for the explanation

  • @seanbell6371
    @seanbell6371 Před 2 lety

    That was awesome. Well done!

  • @azguzb328
    @azguzb328 Před 3 lety +196

    that gasoline idea sound pretty cool, not heavy, a lot of energy in small space

    • @ne1cup
      @ne1cup Před 3 lety +5

      the power curve on gas vs hydrogen is totally different, i really am just guessing a hydrogen would make insane power at insane RPM, so push that engine to 14,000 RPM on a dyno ?

    • @Walkeranz
      @Walkeranz Před 3 lety +35

      You can't just decide to push an engine to 14,000 rpm. Go turn a wrench

    • @benjamind7290
      @benjamind7290 Před 3 lety +10

      That pollution though. And the stink is bad, plus that obnoxious starting sound, rough feel when driving, and not all functions available unless the engine is running, oh yeah and you can't drive or run the engine indoors either. Hmm. Maybe not so good.

    • @ne1cup
      @ne1cup Před 3 lety +2

      @@Walkeranz it is a small displacement 3 cylinder, right? almost a motorcycle engine . shorten the stroke too

    • @chir0pter
      @chir0pter Před 3 lety +19

      @@benjamind7290 Nah doesn't smell, pollution is NBD, sound is great, rough feel only if you drive a shitbox, and why would you want to run functions indoors or when the car isn't on.

  • @realvanman1
    @realvanman1 Před 3 lety +125

    Also not mentioned is the enormous amount of energy required to compress the hydrogen to 10,000 psi, none of which is recovered during vehicle operation.

    • @ADVANCEDTECHTIPS
      @ADVANCEDTECHTIPS Před 3 lety +12

      Offset with nuclear or renewable energy

    • @Brandon_letsgo
      @Brandon_letsgo Před 3 lety +25

      Hydrogen is another pipe dream.

    • @ne1cup
      @ne1cup Před 3 lety +1

      that is a good point, so don't do that

    • @tylerdurden3722
      @tylerdurden3722 Před 3 lety +6

      @@Brandon_letsgo then how would you solve Japan's energy problems?
      Being a small country located in a spot with the highest incidents of earthquakes and tsunamis on the planet, makes nuclear, wind, solar, etc less viable or more expensive or just flat out dangerous than in other countries.
      One of their solutions is to import energy. Electricity can't be imported from far away...and frequencies and voltages differ between countries. (Japan can't even move electricity between north and south because of frequency differences)
      If not imported hydrogen to suppliment their energy needs, what would you propose?

    • @benjamind7290
      @benjamind7290 Před 3 lety +16

      @@tylerdurden3722 The point here is that hydrogen is less efficient than almost any alternative. So actually the answer to your question is pretty easy; do almost anything other than burning hydrogen! Battery powered cars, for example, will move more people more miles and at a cheaper cost than doing it with hydrogen. It doesn't matter how the electricity gets made. Also, Japan has a lot of nuclear reactors and doesn't seem to be slowing down much on nuclear.

  • @t.m.7178
    @t.m.7178 Před 2 lety +1

    I saw Toyota/Yamaha created a 455hp hydrogen engine. Totally reminded me of your channel.

  • @johnaugustine311
    @johnaugustine311 Před 2 lety

    Great info thanks

  • @EspHack
    @EspHack Před 3 lety +267

    Toyota: WE MUST BURN SOMETHING !

    • @joedfazio
      @joedfazio Před 3 lety +20

      Funny!! I think the engine development teams are feeling the heat from the electric powertrain teams, No pistons, No catalytic converters, No valves, No fuel pumps or injectors, some with no transmissions…, The winner is electric!

    • @SyntheticFuture
      @SyntheticFuture Před 3 lety +55

      Wrong. Toyota: we are trying 3 different routes at the same time because no one else is exploring them!

    • @MonMalthias
      @MonMalthias Před 3 lety +28

      Toyota already has hybrids and it's pushing battery chemistry forward that will eventually result in solid state batteries, something that it, unlike Tesla, will be able to disseminate widely. It's also one of the few automakers working on fuel cells, which will arguably supersede both batteries and internal combustion engines even when taking emissions into account.
      Due to embodied emissions of production, battery EVs have higher life cycle emissions unless they charge from electric grids served primarily by nuclear or hydroelectic power. Even with so-called "renewable" grids, the emissions are produced by backup gas turbines. The end result is that unless a BEV is charged from a low emission grid it will also have a lifetime that is high emission eventually. It's one of the reasons why an electric car is greener when running in one of the Scandinavian countries, because that cross-country grid has a backbone of hydroelectricity from Norway, nuclear power from Sweden and wind power from Denmark. But it's not so green when running in California which burns and fracks gas for most of its energy.
      Arguably, the lowest emission vehicle possible is an ammonia fuel cell vehicle using ammonia produced by electricity from a nuclear and hydroelectric grid. That vehicle will be low emissions in operation and embodied in production and disposal. And it would be more fully recyclable, than the carbon fibre composite fuel tanks a hydrogen fuelled vehicle would be. Right now composites are just dumped in landfill, something that Denmark and its kilotons (and in a decade, a megaton) of wind turbine blades are finding out to be a bit of an issue.

    • @genx156
      @genx156 Před 3 lety +2

      MONEY 🤣🤣

    • @dominicancheif117
      @dominicancheif117 Před 3 lety +6

      @@SyntheticFuture They're too late tbh, the worlds set on electrification by 2030. They and other manufacturers got too comfortable and lazy to innovate when there was still time

  • @benderr424
    @benderr424 Před 3 lety +42

    In an interview on of the Toyota’s engineer mentioned the whole thing can be scrapped but they wanted to give it a try at the endurance race, Toyota opened the door so it’ll be interesting where it goes from here

    • @CookedLight
      @CookedLight Před 3 lety +6

      Toyota had prepared lean-burn engines as an alternative to catalytic convertors….the precious metals market ensured govts ignored them and introduced the legislation that guaranteed them a huge income and a superb technology got buried. Battery industry are doing the same right now to petroleum products and will destroy their main green competitor hydrogen too.

    • @nerd1000ify
      @nerd1000ify Před 3 lety +7

      @Alfred Wedmore Lean burn spark ignition is great for economy and mitigating HC and CO but it does nothing good for NOx. Back when those engines were developed this was ok because the NOx emissions limits were relatively high. Once the requirements for NOx emissions became more strict it became impossible to meet them with lean burn engines, stoichiometric mixture and a 3-way cat was the best approach. As an aside, some modern automotive engines do use lean burn under certain conditions, it's just not applicable across the entire load/speed range.
      Just to prove the point, diesels are intrinsically lean burn and thus can't use a 3-way cat. Initially this was allowed for by giving them looser NOx limits (and tighter HC and CO limits, which could be met using an oxidation catalyst) but these days they need the much maligned EGR and SCR systems to meet their NOx limits. A lean burn spark ignition engine would need the same equipment, though depending on the design it might be able to dispense with the DPF that diesels need to prevent soot emissions.

    • @pgbpro20
      @pgbpro20 Před 3 lety +2

      @@nerd1000ify This person spreads truth instead of conspiracy theories. There are plenty of real live conspiracies, no need to go looking so hard for them.

    • @WAN2TREE4
      @WAN2TREE4 Před 3 lety

      @Alfred Wedmore Wrong. The cats are there to protect the environment. All the sensors and the computers in your car are there to protect your cats! Why? Because the catalytic converter is your last line of defense against the harmful gasses that will destroy your planet.

    • @WAN2TREE4
      @WAN2TREE4 Před 3 lety

      @Alfred Wedmore Sorry buddy, between you and the environmental nuts out there, I'll stick with them.

  • @simeonslayton8082
    @simeonslayton8082 Před rokem

    Best detailed and associated logic detailing hydrogen use for transportation.

  • @jonathantamonob9081
    @jonathantamonob9081 Před rokem +1

    This is a very interesting educative video presentation. Would you please make another similar explanation video to use DME in a typical Diesel Engine as a hypothetical replacement for diesel fuel (?) I heard that Volvo Team has introduced Volvo Truck run by DME.

  • @denismilic1878
    @denismilic1878 Před 3 lety +29

    For old cars, the best option is LNG or LPG. That would lower Co2 emissions by 20%-50%, relatively cheap installation, and proven technology. I drive on LPG for decades. Driving is 50% cheaper ROI for installation is from 8-18 months.

    • @MrFaceonline
      @MrFaceonline Před 3 lety

      cng is dirt cheap on the markets. As low as 10c per kg. But that low price for now doesnt reflect low price on the pump stations.

    • @prerunnerwannabe
      @prerunnerwannabe Před 3 lety +3

      It comes with its own issues. If you simply convert a petrol car to CNG, it's only a matter of time until the valves/seats get toasted. Factory converted CNG cars all have hardened valves/seats. CNG was also heavily subsidized in my area, but once that stopped, CNG cars just faded away after a while (I drove CNG cars for years, btw).

    • @denismilic1878
      @denismilic1878 Před 3 lety +1

      @@prerunnerwannabe With modern (last ten years) installations that are not an issue, they can be programmed with a few percent of petrol added in the mixture for protecting injectors, and valves. For very sensitive and complex motors lubrication is added in intake. In my country is very popular almost every station has LPG.

    • @swaroopajit
      @swaroopajit Před 3 lety +2

      Converting to CNG is actually a super popular option in India, there are a bunch of companies that will convert your car to also have a CNG tank, and it's pretty convenient because we have a lot of CNG stations as well since most autos also run on CNG (auto: tuk-tuks or rickshaws, basically a three-wheeled vehicle, that is a common mode of public transportation).

    • @flappingflight8537
      @flappingflight8537 Před 3 lety +2

      The valves/seats problems comes from keeping gasoline as additional fuel ( Bi-fuel option) . The gasoline has much lower octane rating than LPG and CNG so it do not allow increasing of compression ratios which increase the speed of burning . In South Korea pure LPG cars are used with liquid injection of LPG which even increase the power if compared to equivalent gasoline engine .
      The measures to convert gasoline to pure LPG or CNG engines are :
      1 . Increasing the compression ratio 12:1 14:1
      2. Using high energy ignition systems 100mJ and up per spark discharge and use of double tips iridium spark plugs .
      3. Remapping the ignition and fuel maps of the ECU .
      4. Replacing the exhaust valves seats with tool steel made ones and if possible use of sodium filled exhaust valves .
      There was experimental fuel mix mainly CNG with small amount of hydrogen. Hydrogen burns very fast , ignites by much lower energy spark discharge and accelerate the rate of burning of the mixture so it is another way to solve the problem with slower CNG burning speed.

  • @lanzer22
    @lanzer22 Před 3 lety +220

    I love next gen technologies that involve even more moving parts!

    • @AnalyticalReckoner
      @AnalyticalReckoner Před 3 lety +16

      Only thing missing is fuses placed in the center of the engine.

    • @Alpha-1Livewire
      @Alpha-1Livewire Před 3 lety +4

      Right. I just did a timing job on my Ford 281ci. A lot of work and moving parts. How about a cylinder and some spark with electronic timing?

    • @tych88
      @tych88 Před 3 lety +8

      More moving parts = more jobs 😄

    • @squelchedotter
      @squelchedotter Před 3 lety +8

      And also use a fuel which isn't actually renewable (electrolysis isn't cost effective, almost all hydrogen is made from oil), green (still has emissions) and in general is just a campaign by fossil fuel and engine manufacturers to avoid becoming irrelevant.

    • @tych88
      @tych88 Před 3 lety +2

      @@squelchedotter that’s nice, thank you for sharing how you feel Thomas

  • @dantaylor333
    @dantaylor333 Před 2 lety

    I always thought the only bi-product would be water. Very interesting vid dude!

  • @jisake1
    @jisake1 Před 2 lety +7

    Very interesting, but have just one question. With your knowledge, have you ever made or converted an engine to efficiently run?

  • @alanr6529
    @alanr6529 Před 3 lety +348

    At least they’re trying. ‘Rome wasn’t built in a day’.

    • @duffgaryduff
      @duffgaryduff Před 3 lety +16

      Good luck ‘trying’ against the laws of physics.

    • @adibz959
      @adibz959 Před 3 lety +26

      @@duffgaryduff Hydrogen engine doesn't need physic law to win. People need to expose the fact that electric car is dangerous and doesn't make sense on a massive scale. Hydrogen engine doesn't win on science alone. Media and acceptance of petrolhead win hydrogen engine

    • @davidkaplan5517
      @davidkaplan5517 Před 3 lety +3

      just make an EV….

    • @MaddNomad1015
      @MaddNomad1015 Před 3 lety +21

      @@davidkaplan5517 they already are making hybrids and are making EVs soon. They just want to find other ways of carbon neutrality which everyone should do instead of hopping on the bandwagon because it’s cool. Lmao

    • @davidkaplan5517
      @davidkaplan5517 Před 3 lety +4

      @Duncan Macleod lol yes. Let’s build warehouses full of pressurized hydrogen and put giant tanks of it in cars…. Sounds really safe and efficient.

  • @TurboFlash-zj9ku
    @TurboFlash-zj9ku Před 3 lety +58

    Right now I’m putting all my faith on Toyota more than any other thing in existence

    • @whynot1749
      @whynot1749 Před 3 lety +1

      Isnt audi working on a special fuel too. Not hydrogen, but some kind of special gasoline

    • @rodrigo-vl7bi
      @rodrigo-vl7bi Před 3 lety

      Bad idea

    • @jrboostin
      @jrboostin Před 2 lety +1

      And Porsche

    • @sixtus9559
      @sixtus9559 Před 2 lety

      @@whynot1749 Porsche is building a Efuel production in Chile

    • @kingwarrior5028
      @kingwarrior5028 Před 2 lety

      @@whynot1749 isn’t Porche too

  • @MetalRiper1
    @MetalRiper1 Před 2 lety

    Thats a video I needed

  • @phonemail1367
    @phonemail1367 Před 2 lety

    Good job! thanks for the info. I always wondered about this. Maybe a gas/hydrogen hybrid electric? lol

  • @rayholmes931
    @rayholmes931 Před 2 lety +123

    I recently saw a video about JCB in England, they have been experimenting with hydrogen combustion engines in their construction vehicles. From what I saw , they have basically redesigned the cylinder heads for their Diesel engines, and they can now run on hydrogen!

    • @tatradak
      @tatradak Před 2 lety +19

      Well I spoke to a JCB engineer in the beginning of Nov 2021 directly involved in the battery section of JCB and stated their hydrogen direct injection engine isn't real viable due to the huge amount of fuel required, however their Fuel Cell is very efficient, using 80ltr of hydrogen for 8 hours of work on a 16 tonne excavator but that's not JCB system and the cost of the system was huge, at least the cost of the excavator! So they are actually going down the battery route but cant tell anyone as they get huge grants from the UK government

    • @nordic5490
      @nordic5490 Před 2 lety +9

      That was a uncritical puff piece for JCB.
      JCB also make battery powered diggers that make sense. Incresingly, these quiet diggers will be required for night works in residential areas.

    • @nordic5490
      @nordic5490 Před 2 lety +3

      @@tatradak JCB has had a battery digger for a year now.

    • @jimdiet8534
      @jimdiet8534 Před 2 lety +6

      @@nordic5490 JCB said that small excavators are a better fit for batteries because most of the small excavators are not used for more than 4 hours in a day. The use of batteries in large excavators is not cost-effective or even feasible at this time.

    • @MrPikkoz
      @MrPikkoz Před 2 lety +4

      The 20 ton excavator it's not viable in it's presentation , behind it there is a £150.000 container ( the with the same colours as the excavator) filled with hydrogen and a built in pump that is barely able to sustain the refill for that single excavator for half a day work.
      The developing of that engine is just free publicity as it's 100% funded by the government.

  • @enigmaPL
    @enigmaPL Před 2 lety +238

    The more work goes into every step of the process, the cheaper and more effective it gets.
    The early days of gasoline, diesel and even electric were not pretty. Took time to get to where it is today, and be as cost-efficient as it is, at scale.
    The important thing is to take steps to make that progress, and innovation will follow.

    • @Ravi-fx6vf
      @Ravi-fx6vf Před 2 lety +14

      100%. Scale is the biggest factor in price

    • @rhett7716
      @rhett7716 Před 2 lety

      well i hope this will help save the planet !!🤣

    • @bubba842
      @bubba842 Před 2 lety +24

      The efficiency will not change though. These are theoritical maximums. You will never be able to gain more efficiently from combustion. Physics says NO!!
      Plus why lose half of all your energy turning a transmission, driveshaft and differential when you have a much more efficient example: a hydrogen fuel cell that powers a motor right at the wheel station.
      This technology makes no sense.
      It is just a pipe dream being pursued by existing engine manufacturers like Cummins to keep themselves in the game.
      The writing is in the wall. They need to embrace change and research sensible technologies that have potential, instead of trying to adapt old technology.

    • @collinhruschka8441
      @collinhruschka8441 Před 2 lety +22

      @@bubba842 Why can't all these technologies exists simultaneously and then the consumer can make the decision for themselves regarding which type of car they want to buy? They just completed a 24 hour race with the car so the tech makes sense, its just not what you want in your car. Why do you care where Toyota puts their money anyways? If you want the most efficient vehicle, you can go buy that vehicle. Enough with this holier than thou stuff about sensibility and embracing change though, its too cliche.

    • @bubba842
      @bubba842 Před 2 lety +11

      @@collinhruschka8441 it's called business pal no holier than thou sensibilities. All these technologies will exist to an extent, but for the purpose they are required in.
      We will not have multiple technologies competing. Hydrogen fuel cells are cheaper and a lot more efficient than this technology. The vast majority of people will go with what's cheaper and is more efficient. Unfortunately neither of those technologies have an edge on Battery EVs. Yes hydrogen fuel cells will have their place in long distance and off road technologies, but every day people who commute will be driving EVs.
      There is room for this in the future in very niche areas, but those areas will not produce the revenue for a mass rollout of this technology to the mainstream, as it's just recycled old technology that will never get past the physics and downsides of combustion.
      The infrastructure is not in place for this technology and probably never will be. It will use twice as much hydrogen compared to a hydrogen fuel cell vehicle and will have a tank twice the size of today's gasoline fuel tanks. With that it will cost twice as much to fill up.
      I don't see any positives for the average person in using this technology. The only positives will be for legacy engine manufacturers, trying to hold on to a dying industry, hence why they are pushing it.
      The nature of the business environment will not allow multiple different technologies to exist all at once.
      There are many examples of this in the past. AC vs DC electricity, VHS vs Betamax and HD DVD vs Blu Ray.
      A standalone entity will survive, but unfortunately it will not be this hydrogen combustion.

  • @TheLPN05Fan
    @TheLPN05Fan Před 2 lety

    I like you give plausibility for Uses in Racecraft and I'm all in for it. I see a clear market for all the old blooded Petrol heads including me (18yo) who wouldn't mind on toning down emissions without the cost of the essential expierience of a car. Blubbering and screaming cylinders and doritos. I also see room for different engine types (to the V, W and Inline Engines), exspacially my beloved Opposed Piston Engines.

  • @shreyashmane3008
    @shreyashmane3008 Před 2 měsíci

    Great video

  • @abinmmj
    @abinmmj Před 3 lety +41

    Great explanation. The drawbacks of hydrogen were looked into years ago. The fuel cost alone will deter people from buying a hydrogen car. Then you have the massive infrastructure cost.

    • @gokcan83
      @gokcan83 Před 3 lety +9

      Hydrogen use with fuel cell engines is the only absolute solution though. It may be expensive right now; but much better choice than ruining the atmosphere and ruining the Earth. Its emission is water !

    • @abinmmj
      @abinmmj Před 3 lety +4

      @@gokcan83 It is better but better doesn't mean it is viable. Do you think people will be motivated to buy a hydrogen powered car when they learn about the expenses involved? Unless something can be done to reduce cost to a reasonable level this won't take off.

    • @ianchandley
      @ianchandley Před 3 lety +7

      @@abinmmj the US Govt, federal and state, subsidizes the oil and gas industry to the tune of over US$20 BILLION per year. Transfer those subsidies to the hydrogen infrastructure instead, and hydrogen becomes a viable fuel option.....

    • @Menga213
      @Menga213 Před 3 lety +4

      @@abinmmj Hydrogen will be use for all of Transportation, including semi-trucks, airplanes, cruise ships and powering houses. Don't worry Hydrogen is not going anywhere now

    • @SelecaoOfMidas
      @SelecaoOfMidas Před 3 lety

      @@ianchandley So you say. Devil's in the details (and line items).

  • @Runoratsu
    @Runoratsu Před 3 lety +46

    I mean, there’s even more problems with storage: Hydrogen is such a small molecule it diffuses through _anything,_ so while you’re just sitting there, your car is leaking fuel. Also, filling it up is a huge issue, because of multiple reasons:
    • it‘s hard to get such a high pressure connection system both reliable, safe and easy enough for regular people to use (the part that is the nozzle on the fuel hose today-in a hydrogen car, it has to be a leak proof interconnect that can hold the 10k PSI, have high pressure valves on both ends of the connection and can still be easily connected/disconnected hundreds of thousands of times),
    • it‘s hard to store for the station (needs huge tanks and they are, again, leaky),
    • and on top of it all, it‘s ridiculously easy to ignite compared to gas or diesel, so if there IS a leak somewhere, the smallest spark can make your station into a Hindenburg reenactment.

    • @arda7527
      @arda7527 Před 3 lety +2

      Because of those problems, scientists are working on trying to store it as easy to divide molecules which will make it a bit denser but safer and easier to store.

    • @KendallPhillips89
      @KendallPhillips89 Před 3 lety +9

      We have hydrogen tanks that do no leak. Not sure where your getting that

    • @dragancrnogorac3851
      @dragancrnogorac3851 Před 3 lety +1

      Hydrogen is not exactly terribly dangerous. Diesel and gasoline they are at leaking point. LPG butane is kinda heavy and sticking around in corners.
      Hydrogen is lite and really wants to escape upwards. So if you have small continues leak hydrogen is nowhere to be found, let alone burn. If you have big sudden leak than few seconds later it's all gone. It's climbing at few meters per second rate. Just don't have trapping area and no worries.

    • @firestorm734
      @firestorm734 Před 3 lety +2

      While H2 Permeation is an issue, it is very time dependent; unless you're trying to store a fixed volume of gas for a long time, the amount lost to permeation would be miniscule when compared to the volume which is used. E10 gasoline suffers from similar long-term storage issues due to water absorption, so the permeation issue is less of a concern than you might think. The bigger issue is closely related, which is maintaining a leak-tight H2 management system (since H2 is far more prone to leaks in fittings and pumps than other compressed gasses).
      As for your other issues with the gas handling challenges, there is actually good news: most of those issues have already been addressed by previous compressed gas handling solutions. Compressed natural gas in particular has set most of the engineering standards for dealing with safe and repeatable solutions for the transfer and storage of a compressed flammable gas, so most of the engineering best practices and standard operating procedures for users are already mature.

    • @depecheddurand
      @depecheddurand Před 3 lety +4

      @@KendallPhillips89 He is just trying to show how big of a nerd he is.

  • @caty863
    @caty863 Před 2 lety +4

    If we don't get a breakthrough in battery technology soon, hydrogen is going to be our savior regarding mobile applications such as airplanes. We just need cheap electricity to produce it cost-effectively.

  • @jankifer6979
    @jankifer6979 Před 2 lety +2

    Hey, great video 👍
    I’ve read about BMW trying to solve the emission problem due to the engine oil being burned, by using ceramic pistons, which don’t require lubrication. 🤔 but they stopped the further development

  • @daverothfarb2739
    @daverothfarb2739 Před 3 lety +85

    Fascinating explanation, really enjoyed this! I used to think hydrogen fuel was a no-brainer for sustainability but it's not quite that easy. As usual, thank you for the awesome video! Nicely executed, well articulated.

    • @Berkhoi
      @Berkhoi Před 2 lety +2

      It's no brainer if you have no brains. Why waste most of the power produced on an inefficient process that roduces an inefficient fuel which which produces insufficient power? Also, you have to carry around two heavy H2 tanks containing the gas at such high pressures that a smile accident can cause them to both explode due to pressure and ignition. Definite death. Even a simple leak in any of the piping is enough to cause trouble, which is bound to haen due to the excessively corrosive property of H2.

    • @moabman6803
      @moabman6803 Před 2 lety +2

      Actually you don't need to store hydrogen in tanks. They have developed technology that is far safer. It's been around for quite a while actually. But yes if you just got out of a time machine from the year 2000, then that would make sense.

    • @wilsjane
      @wilsjane Před 2 lety +1

      @@Berkhoi Apart from the points that you have raised, the real problem is that the energy used to compress the hydrogen alone can exceed the calorific value of the fuel. This makes the whole concept virtually pointless. Needless to say, I would not want to live too near to a filling station and tankers delivering hydrogen compressed to an excess of 10,000'psi would be travelling bombs, even without any fire.
      Back in WW2, when fuel was short here in the UK, many delivery vans ran on coal gas (97% hydrogen). However, a large leather bladder was fitted onto their roof, to allow direct filling from the town gas supply only pressurised by the gasometer's.
      The natural coal tar mix improved combustion and lubrication, but the bladder was almost as large as the van, with a range of between 20 and 30 miles.
      PS, the risk of combustion explosions with hydrogen is fairly low compared with LPG. Propane (which is heavier than air) pools and causes fire balls. while Methane diffuses and explodes. Both of these gasses have caused explosions after leaking into below ground sewers.

    • @rhett7716
      @rhett7716 Před 2 lety

      @@wilsjane the real problem is too many people and pop growth is rising exponentionally !@

  • @boomdaus
    @boomdaus Před 3 lety +18

    very cool vid that close to my heart as I am doing a master thesis on an ammonia-based spark-ignition engine.

  • @charlestackett7137
    @charlestackett7137 Před 2 lety

    Enjoyed this.

  • @jys160
    @jys160 Před 2 lety +6

    What do you think of the viability of using ammonia as fuel as hydrogen can be extracted from this and is relatively easy to store compared to using compressed hydrogen.

    • @electric7487
      @electric7487 Před rokem

      MAN Diesel are looking into ammonia-powered engines for ships.

  • @calenwatters5267
    @calenwatters5267 Před 3 lety +45

    Had to read the JEURC paper for my dissertation, I feel that pain.

  • @LooseNut099
    @LooseNut099 Před 3 lety +7

    Fabulous presentation. Thank you, Jason.

  • @daviskites
    @daviskites Před 2 lety

    Fantastic video. It still surprises me that we want to use renewable electricity to manufacture hydrogen (making it green hydrogen), which then needs to be stored and transported, to then be put into a car which contains a fuel cell, which coverts the hydrogen back to electricity to make it run. Bonkers. Keep up the good work!

    • @northdakotaham1752
      @northdakotaham1752 Před 2 lety

      There is no such thing as "green" energy. Every type of energy has positive consequences and negative consequences. The presenter of this video is spewing out CO2 as he talks. The faster he talks, the more CO2 he spews out!
      The eventual goal with hydrogen use would be to produce it upon demand which would eliminate any storage or transportation issues. Electricity also has serious transportation issues called the "grid" which in order to expand would require trillions upon trillions of dollars spent towards generating needs and distribution.

  • @aniskrache6318
    @aniskrache6318 Před 2 lety +1

    Hi and thank you for your video, very useful. Is that any way to resue the emitted water from the car itself to produce dihydrogen? Does the reaction cost more energy to produce dihydrogen?
    Regard

  • @johnpenguin9188
    @johnpenguin9188 Před 3 lety +158

    Oh yes and with all of those hydrogen filling stations in my town I will be set.

    • @HondaTrumpAi
      @HondaTrumpAi Před 3 lety +18

      😂😂😂😂😂😂 Liberals will tax us higher and pay for it.
      Hydrogen tax, wait for it 🚫🌈

    • @riba2233
      @riba2233 Před 3 lety +45

      @@HondaTrumpAi do you even know what "liberal" means? They can only be against taxes. Maybe you meant leftists or socialists etc.

    • @user-lw1cf9wr1m
      @user-lw1cf9wr1m Před 3 lety +17

      By your logic we shouldn’t do nothing? Glad you aren’t in control

    • @AtlasReburdened
      @AtlasReburdened Před 3 lety +7

      @@riba2233 Well there's no functional liberal party currently. It seemingly being wholly roped along by the leftists like it's would-be constituents. At the moment, at least to the casual observer and in the pragmatic sense, it seems the terms are interchangeable.

    • @VicTor-gi7so
      @VicTor-gi7so Před 3 lety

      Water .uses water

  • @cyrilhobbs2318
    @cyrilhobbs2318 Před 2 lety +332

    See “Harry’s Garage” interview with JCB & development of hydrogen engines 👍🏻

    • @richardhasler6718
      @richardhasler6718 Před 2 lety +25

      Yes, great. I can always commute in a 25 ton excavator. Not sure how long it would take but what an entrance and you can make your own parking space.

    • @arnefines2356
      @arnefines2356 Před 2 lety +10

      They left out all disadvantages. Fuel Cell equals less parts and maintance, less profits

    • @baronvonteuchter1412
      @baronvonteuchter1412 Před 2 lety +29

      @@arnefines2356 and a hugely expensive battery which isn’t getting cheaper any time soon due to the rare Earth metal resource constraint

    • @arnefines2356
      @arnefines2356 Před 2 lety +10

      @@baronvonteuchter1412 Not getting cheaper? Rare earth metals are in fewer and fewer batteries.

    • @timseytiger9280
      @timseytiger9280 Před 2 lety +2

      @@arnefines2356 of course they did they don't know how to make them. All they know is ice so they'll, lose their company chasing it.

  • @axiss5840
    @axiss5840 Před 2 lety

    Ten times better than the other hot takes on this topic.

  • @adrianf.5847
    @adrianf.5847 Před 2 lety +11

    First of all, the high efficiency of the fuel cell comes from a long R&D process which took place over the course of several decades. I would not be surprised if the HCCI engine (which already is at 45% efficiency) could go through the same process, perhaps even with a better efficiency than the fuel cell at the end of it.
    Then, the hydrogen can probably be produced using solar-powered thermal reactions in countries with high temperatures; I imagine a future in which countries which now produce oil instead produce hydrogen, which has the advantage of being able to be shipped to other nations as an energy source. (Note that the U. S. and China would be some of these countries, as would be Spain.)
    Thirdly, the large tank size, as well as the 4h refilling time, can be remedied by exchanging the entire tank at refilling stations. This will reduce the total refilling time 7-fold.

    • @mikebunting847
      @mikebunting847 Před 2 lety +1

      Well said. From what it sounds like formula one will be almost zero emission by 2030, and in order to do that there needs to be an abundance of wind and solar energy to pull hydrogen from water and then to store and ship.

    • @anonemoose102
      @anonemoose102 Před 2 lety

      Solar lmao

    • @cookiecrumb1018
      @cookiecrumb1018 Před rokem

      @@mikebunting847 not really they found a way to make hydrogen by using gallium and tin in water

  • @srojas3534
    @srojas3534 Před 3 lety +4

    Your videos are always out of this world, thank you for encouraging me to be mechanical engineer

  • @franceskomichali2646
    @franceskomichali2646 Před 3 lety +16

    Ever since I saw and heard that racecar hydrogen powered corolla I started waiting for your video

  • @saxenankur79
    @saxenankur79 Před rokem

    Thanks for nice explanation 🙂
    What could be the next level fuel which reduces the carbon and nitrogen emissions and would be available wide across?

  • @kjellpernestal8429
    @kjellpernestal8429 Před 2 lety +2

    Both Mercedes Benz and BMW had working ICE engines during the 70-ties as well as there were some converted ICEs in US for test purposes. One thing, not mentioned is that stoichometric combustion of hydrogen and air will result in such high temperatures that the nitrogen oxides are produced in large quantities (order of 5 - 10 000 ppm) since there is no carbon source it can not be catalyzed away as in peterol engines. The solution is to use lean fuel mixtures (approx 50%) in purpose to reduce the combustion temperature in purpose to avoid NOx formation. This results in a much lower specific power which can, in turn, be overcome by supercharging and/or an increase of engine rpm. An alternative tested was water injection into the combustion chamber in purpose to reduce the temperature. MB had both hydrogen fueled small buses and traditional sedan cars. To my knowledge most of these projects has been terminated.

    • @Remmy1995
      @Remmy1995 Před 2 lety

      Finally someone pointed it out!

  • @Dingus420
    @Dingus420 Před 3 lety +79

    I'd love to see an efficiency comparison between Toyota and Mazda's hydrogen engines

    • @EliteNK
      @EliteNK Před 3 lety +1

      Going to assume Toyota will be better

    • @untitled6391
      @untitled6391 Před 2 lety

      @@EliteNK same. Unless proven wrong, of course.

  • @sujaymaddireddy4517
    @sujaymaddireddy4517 Před 3 lety +49

    I've always wondered, how do you find these things out? Do the manufacturers contact you as a journalist, or do you ask them on your own? Great video!

    • @cappuccino-1721
      @cappuccino-1721 Před 3 lety +1

      Probably a mix of both

    • @EngineeringExplained
      @EngineeringExplained  Před 3 lety +56

      I've found if you just open enough tabs you can learn all kinds of stuff. It's a mix of both! In this case I'd heard about the engine a while back when they'd announced they were racing it, so I asked Toyota if I could use their engine animation and they sent it. :)

  • @johnbode2756
    @johnbode2756 Před 2 lety

    Good explanation of a complex subject. What about using Plasma Kinetics hydrogen film production and storage system with a fuel cell? Perhaps, Tesla's innovative PM electric motor connected to a fuel cell connected to some type of film storage system.

  • @user-xl5um2sw4w
    @user-xl5um2sw4w Před rokem

    Great video, when you touch on the fuel tank at the end, i was thinking that any one is forgetting the last part of the equation. That is the danger of hydrogen alone that we can't smell, see, and is easy to leak( you mentioned the easiness to leak at the valves) and is quick to ignite. It could be dangerous in an accident. You mentioned the cost of manufacturing the hydrogen. No matter what, the we need more energy to produce it then it gives.
    At Ballard in BC Canada, they have been working on fuel cells in cars and buses etc. Great amount of money have been spend and it is still not there. I understand that we want to keep the ICE but looks like we have to adapt to something else. To be more sporty, manual transmission with electric motor?
    Thank you for the great videos that you do,

  • @basithph8958
    @basithph8958 Před 3 lety +60

    Can’t wait to see the tuning potential this hydrogen combustion engine has🔥

    • @martini380
      @martini380 Před 3 lety +14

      Just imagine a car like the bmw hydrogen 7 (6.0L V12 390 Nm, 191 kW) but more performance oriented

    • @ajstevens1652
      @ajstevens1652 Před 3 lety +15

      @@martini380 To bring back these large N/A engines with Hydrogen combustion would be awesome.

    • @boboutelama5748
      @boboutelama5748 Před 3 lety +8

      Guys. Don't forget that hydrogen may be clean in the burn, but it's polluting in the making.
      So to have a middle way and not be too crazy would be the reasonable way to go.

    • @user-gm4kv2my4u
      @user-gm4kv2my4u Před 3 lety +21

      @@boboutelama5748 everything has some level of pollution. EVs create plenty of environmental issues themselves. The idea is to pollute less than we are now.

    • @basithph8958
      @basithph8958 Před 3 lety +4

      @@user-gm4kv2my4u Exactly

  • @jameslafayette3866
    @jameslafayette3866 Před 2 lety +48

    It makes sense if you convert the power grid to nuclear power.

    • @wilsjane
      @wilsjane Před 2 lety +7

      Here in the UK, the planned conversion to electric vehicles will require 10 additional power stations. Plans are to build more wind farms.
      However, the grid infrastructure is a far more serious problem and will require extensive upgrades. As recharging becomes faster, charging areas will be supplied from the 11'kV high voltage grid, rather than the low voltage sectors.
      At the moment, the government are promoting electric vehicles, since the change over to regenerative AC motors on the railways, along with LED lighting and induction cooker hobs has reduced the grid load quite considerably.
      In the future, the government expects to slow down the sale of electric vehicles to keep the electricity requirement in balance.

    • @richarddietzen3137
      @richarddietzen3137 Před 2 lety +2

      @@wilsjane Sounds like ride sharing, mass transit and reduced car ownership with Uber, Lyft et c will get a boost. As may thorium reactors for electricity. If personal ICE cars were closed course only, humankind will be playing more video games and gain 100 lbs per person. Not to mention noise, electrical leakage, and fire risk from 11kv lines. Yuk.

    • @geroutathat
      @geroutathat Před 2 lety +3

      @@wilsjane The UK had planned on Ireland to offer green energy but that might go to France now. However the hydrogen dream is not over in the UK, they will be injecting hydrogen into the gas supply network and rolling out hydrogen ready gas burners for home heating. How will they make the hydrogen? probably wind farms at sea that convert the sea directly to hydrogen and dont need any expensive batteries.

    • @wilsjane
      @wilsjane Před 2 lety +1

      @@geroutathat That makes a great deal of sense, avoiding the losses of conveying the electricity inland from offshore wind farms. The oxygen produced by splitting the water will be a valuable biproduct.
      Prior to the discovery of natural gas in the 1960s, town gas in the UK was mainly hydrogen, with a small percentage of carbon monoxide. It was produced by heating coal in a vertical retort and the coke then went on to fire the power stations.
      The one problem is that hydrogen has a lower calorific value than natural gas, so some upgrades may be needed to the distribution pipework. This is because following the changeover to natural gas, the crumbling cast iron Victorian pipework in the cities was used as ducts to install the natural gas pipes, thus reducing their size by up to 50%.
      We may also see a return of the famous gas holders that were used to smooth out the peaks in demand. Possibly the hydrogen will be supplied at higher pressure than previously, avoiding pipework upgrades.
      Hydrogen to directly power vehicles is a non starter, simply because it does not liquify. This results in huge energy wastage in compressing the gas for distribution. From production to final use in a vehicle, around 70% of the energy is lost as a result of compression for distribution and into the vehicles fuel tanks.

    • @dannygreen7473
      @dannygreen7473 Před 2 lety

      @@wilsjane EV's are the scam of the century.
      They could not be more harmful to the environment.
      Countless tons of rare, toxic metals must be strip mined and processed with vast quantities of toxic chemicals in order to manufacture batteries which will become yet another source of various toxic waste streams. Even if these waste batteries are "recycled", doing so will require more toxic chemicals and huge quantities of energy.
      The mining and processing of these rare, toxic materials requires vast quantities of energy in remote areas with little to no electrical infrastructure.
      We currently do not have enough electricity production in places like California to keep up with the current demand that does not include having EV's replacing gasoline and diesel vehicles. Already high electricity prices will skyrocket as more EV's hit the roads.
      Hydrogen is a much better path forward.

  • @kurtbilinski1723
    @kurtbilinski1723 Před rokem +1

    James May from Top Gear said it best: "the problem is that hydrogen is attached to other stuff." A very understated remark because it is indeed, and takes a lot of energy to split it off by itself. This is what everyone's ignoring. It's like someone saying that they're building flying saucers, counting on someone to hand them an anti-gravity devices to make it all work. The devil's in the details.

  • @ghostshadow9046
    @ghostshadow9046 Před 2 lety

    In the eighties high school I went to converted Briggs and Stratton lawn mower engines to run on propane, butane, hydrogen we even ran one off of acetylene.

  • @terryo5672
    @terryo5672 Před 2 lety +51

    What about hydrogen combustion for HGVs, trains, boats and tractors etc. I can see small cars going the electric route but not heavy vehicles. I am impressed by the work JCB are doing here.

    • @Kezenmacher
      @Kezenmacher Před 2 lety +4

      I had the same thought - JCB is on the forefront of Hydrogen-Combustion engines for use in heavy machinery

    • @pfauniversal1890
      @pfauniversal1890 Před 2 lety

      @@Kezenmacher J C Backwards 😁

    • @stephenmason5682
      @stephenmason5682 Před 2 lety

      Double the cost for an EV Car? Very funny!

    • @biz2556
      @biz2556 Před 2 lety

      @@Kezenmacher JCB is garbage.

    • @saltymonke3682
      @saltymonke3682 Před 2 lety +5

      Kawasaki has marine hydrogen engine for ships. In fact, they have 2 operational liquified hydrogen carrier so far. Their target is 80 ships.

  • @paulpurington8637
    @paulpurington8637 Před 2 lety +16

    Love it when the white board comes out. Great diagrams and clear explanations! Thanks!!

  • @johndunbar7504
    @johndunbar7504 Před rokem

    Magnificent presentation. Congratulations (and that's from a Ph.D)

  • @stevelowale9902
    @stevelowale9902 Před 2 lety +2

    Engineering explained, your a engineer, design a new fuel for the whole world. Your very in the know. I'm sure your working on this? You will become more famous with the fuel guy's and for sure you will get very rich, well anyway. Keep the good vibes coming, and electric cars away from us. The gas car guy's. Keep up the good information & knowledge coming. 👌

  • @Link2edition
    @Link2edition Před 2 lety +34

    I would love for this tech to develop enough to overcome these challenges.

    • @slevinchannel7589
      @slevinchannel7589 Před 2 lety +2

      Random af question: Want some science-channel to check out, cause the
      learning never ends? I got some.

    • @mjoet731
      @mjoet731 Před 2 lety +1

      Why? What's so exciting about hydrogen? You can't just stick a hose up in the air and extract it.

    • @northdakotaham1752
      @northdakotaham1752 Před 2 lety +2

      @@mjoet731 the attraction to hydrogen is that its the most common element on the planet and we spend our entire life surrounded by it. It presents a 100 percent renewable source of energy that would never be exhausted and could potentially be produced wherever it needs to be used eliminating all the expense of transportation and distribution. Hydrogen on demand.

    • @Justbetru
      @Justbetru Před rokem

      The way this guy presents everything is made to convince the listener that it looks promising but somehow it’s just not possible, sorry!
      The reality is he is a paid detractor as many people on you tube are. There are many technologies that are possible for the betterment of mankind but some people wish to control the world and if a technology creates freedom for others out of their control then they find every way possible to stop it. One of the most effective ways is to hijack a movement or technology and redirect to more controllable circumstances. It allows for the masses to believe something never went anywhere because it was just inefficient or “uneconomical”. When the truth is it allowed to much freedom from the control of those who benefit from manipulating the population.
      Now if they could find a way to profit more off of hydrogen than oil or electric then we will be using hydrogen in the future. But until they find the perfect way to keep control while allowing people to use hydrogen. We won’t see anything but misdirection and manipulation of statistics.

  • @dadmezz4024
    @dadmezz4024 Před 2 lety +33

    I love that most things can be figured out by the numbers first before energy is wasted.
    Love when real plans come together in an effort to go into correct direction more expediently.
    Nice work and video.

  • @captainwho1
    @captainwho1 Před 2 lety

    Great video! You didn't touch on Metal Hydride storage tanks systems, similar to the one that Bob Lazar claimed to have proven feasible. His was Lithium Deuteride.

  • @r.o.5594
    @r.o.5594 Před 2 lety +61

    Thank you for your video and your quick comparison. However, why don't you talk about costs comparing a fuel cell and a H2ICE?? It is further cheaper to adapt an ICE to work with H2 than using fuel cells currently.
    There are a lot of scientific papers researching on H2ICE and it is not difficult. My PhD thesis is based on comparing H2, CH4 and coke oven gas in a port-fuel SI engine, showing good efficiency and low emissions. It's true that there's still much work to do, but with your general comments, you just do a simplified comparison, taking down the work of many people during years. And you only take as a reference the job of a company on a single car, instead of referencing scientific papers.
    On the other hand, do you think that taking a single quote of a report is enough to say that H2 has no role in the future energy system? Try to store electricity during months with huge batteries at the same price compared to H2 using salt caverns or think the price of the reinforcement of the electrical grid in the future as the electrical demand increases, compared to using H2 pipelines which is way cheaper, as seen in many papers. Many scientists and countries are investing in H2 for many reasons, not for just a report or a single quote.
    I just ask to avoid giving quick general conclusions which influence people, instead of providing information to encourage people to inform and learn more. Technology can develop and improve very quickly, as seen during the last century.
    Sorry for the length of my opinion and I don't want to offend anyone!
    Thank you again for your videos!

    • @fernandomoreno9487
      @fernandomoreno9487 Před 2 lety +5

      Would you may be have a link to share to have a look to you thesis?

    • @waleedalmilli3310
      @waleedalmilli3310 Před 2 lety +2

      I would also be very interested to read your paper.

    • @theoldmanreed8818
      @theoldmanreed8818 Před rokem +1

      How is the metal fatigue issue with hydrogen ?

    • @silo3com
      @silo3com Před rokem

      Please do a video on your research. It sounds very interesting