Hydrogen Will Not Save Us. Here's Why.

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  • čas přidán 18. 05. 2024
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    Replacing fossil fuel with hydrogen seems like an ideal solution to make transportation environmentally friendly and to provide a backup for intermittent energy sources like solar and wind. But how environmentally friendly is hydrogen really? And how sustainable is it, given that hydrogen fuel cells rely on supply of rare metals like platinum and iridium? In this video, we have collected all the relevant numbers for you.
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    00:00 Intro
    00:49 Hydrogen Basics
    03:39 The Hydrogen Market
    06:04 The Colours Of Hydrogen
    12:11 Water Supply
    13:34 The Cold Start Problem
    14:05 Rare Metal Shortages
    15:55 Hydrogen Embrittlement
    16:45 Summary
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    #science #technology #climate
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 13K

  • @SabineHossenfelder
    @SabineHossenfelder  Před 7 měsíci +38

    This video comes with a quiz to help make the knowledge stick. Try it out here: quizwithit.com/start_thequiz/1694265286826x891751541890124500

    • @itsmorphed6416
      @itsmorphed6416 Před 7 měsíci +3

      I'm OK for brainwashing but thanks.

    • @logmeindangit
      @logmeindangit Před 6 měsíci +1

      To what brainwashing are you referring?

    • @itsmorphed6416
      @itsmorphed6416 Před 6 měsíci

      @logmeindangit I don't trust this woman based on the so called climate scientist guy she recommends . He's just an propaganda activist therefore she is not trusted for me .

    • @cbarcus
      @cbarcus Před 6 měsíci

      The US DoE has set a target for 2026: 76% system efficiency for high temperature electrolysis. Ultimately, we would like to use advanced nuclear to output at 700-1000 C, using a closed Brayton power conversion cycle at around 50% efficiency, dry cooling to minimize water consumption (increases flexibility of plant location), and for the nuclear island to cost less than $1/watt.
      While fuel cells today operate at around 50% efficiency, it appears that 70% is possible. Ultra-low PGM and PGM-free membranes are still under heavy development, but could be a game changer along with solid state H2 storage, greatly expanding the H2 use case in the transportation sector. Solid state storage can also greatly reduce the pressure required. Liquefaction energy costs may also be cut in roughly half with an advanced process.
      Power delivery with H2 will soon get a major boost with the H70HF protocol, which has been tested with an average fill rate of around 13 kg-H2/min (about 16MW @ 52% efficiency & H2 HHV). Truck stops in the US can dispense energy at around 300 MW, so fast fills lower the footprint and ensure a high utilization of infrastructure.
      The potential of the H2 economy has been widely underestimated somewhat due the assumption that all energy production in the future will be from a material-intensive continent-spanning renewable-centric grid. This vision is likely fatally flawed due to the limits of mining, economics, environmental footprint, and diminishing returns.
      Climate mitigation is a race against time, and to rapidly scale up sustainable power, we are going to have to innovate like crazy to optimize our use of materials (due to power density, a nuclear-based system should use around 10x less). If we decouple sustainable energy production from the grid, we should be able to accelerate growth and meet our cost reduction targets. Very low cost power will be crucial to maximizing the rate of decarbonization, including the enabling of carbon capture on a massive scale.

    • @Flyingdutchy33
      @Flyingdutchy33 Před 6 měsíci +3

      Hold on a moment, hydrogen power cars would be a little bit heavier? A hatchback sized EV now weighs more than a 1969 Dodge Charger....

  • @davidreichert9392
    @davidreichert9392 Před rokem +4745

    I spent two years working as an engineer in the hydrogen fuel cell industry. Going in I was so excited to be part of what I thought was going to be the future, but the reality of it set in pretty quickly. Been back in nuclear ever since.

    • @torgrimhanssen5100
      @torgrimhanssen5100 Před rokem +188

      Indeed, hydrogen is only 60% less "nuclear" than putting nuclear powered steam engines in cars >.<
      While there is no fallout the explosion in case of a disaster is absolutely devastating.
      Trying to hint that you would need a containment around the fuel tank equal to 60% of what a conventional nuclear reactor has to scale.
      In similarity, a hydrogen tank exploding in the street is as devastating as that ammonia tank "exploding" devastating miles around it decades ago. (to scale).

    • @dodiewallace41
      @dodiewallace41 Před rokem +232

      NP is the gold standard of clean energy. It’s as clean and safe as any alternative, & it does it with a fraction of the resources. NP really is the premier example of the phenomenon of ‘dematerialization’ in which we actually use less to produce more.

    • @justforthehackofit
      @justforthehackofit Před rokem +80

      @@dodiewallace41 pity it's so extremely expensive

    • @Crazmuss
      @Crazmuss Před rokem +62

      @@torgrimhanssen5100 in good old times they would just put engine on a cart with no protection at all. Modern men are weak!

    • @RWin-fp5jn
      @RWin-fp5jn Před rokem +278

      Amen! I was right there form the beginning. Hydrogen as a carrier is a distracting niche at best. Let's not waste any more time to ponder what the ideal mix would be for the future; Use Hydro, Solar and wind where possible but ALWAYS and everywhere have a grid backbone of Nuclear energy to balance windfall moments. As for nuclear; we should now step over to the extremely safe Thorium LFTR reactor models. Unlike fusion, it is proven technology (we had a molten salt reactor up and running in Oakland Tennessee in the 60s!), has close to no waste and the little waste it still produces had a half-time of about 300 years. It is literally a no brainer, even though I realize that may still be a high bar for most politicians and NGO's....

  • @euchiron
    @euchiron Před rokem +2430

    Shout out to your co-host Mercury for explaining the pressure requirements

    • @wisequigon
      @wisequigon Před rokem +109

      yeah, it was cool the first time, ok the second time... but using him so many times is cringe...

    • @mbr426
      @mbr426 Před rokem +134

      It was comedically successful

    • @jettoblack
      @jettoblack Před rokem +171

      @@wisequigon Like Freddie, this joke never got old.

    • @Monstufpud
      @Monstufpud Před rokem +44

      That makes it even funnier

    • @neiloflongbeck5705
      @neiloflongbeck5705 Před rokem +43

      Brian the Astrophysicist was unable to make comment.

  • @franks4973
    @franks4973 Před 6 měsíci +77

    Love that you included the full lifecycle of environmental impact. Powering our world is not a fad.

  • @paulhaynes8045
    @paulhaynes8045 Před 7 měsíci +10

    Coming to this a bit late, but one of the problems identified here in the UK - where it has been generally assumed that hydrogen can simply replace the domestic supply of natural gas - is that it leaks out of the pipes. Not only does this mean that much hydrogen is lost, but potentially pockets of the highly explosive gas can accumulate under our roads and pavements...

    • @brianboyle2681
      @brianboyle2681 Před 5 měsíci +3

      Coming to this even later - I find the green energy space has been infected a bit by the start up approach to business culture that pervades today - specifically that obvious problems like those you have raised will have a handwavy “we’ll find a solution if we just keep investing and believing enough” response.

  • @kevinstenger4334
    @kevinstenger4334 Před rokem +1016

    Nice presentation. I worked for Air Products & Chemicals as a hydrogen plant operator back when we were producing all of the liquid hydrogen for the space shuttle program. We also filled hydrogen tube trailers for shipping gaseous hydrogen to food processing and semiconductor manufacturers that were filled to 5000psi. What you didn’t get into is the safety hazards of hydrogen fueled cars. Leaks are a real problem if you aren’t very careful and dealing with that makes things expensive. If you do get a leak, and you likely will because those tiny little buggers are very good at escaping, having your car in your garage can easily turn your garage into a bomb that is attached to your house. A little bit of static electricity is all it takes to ignite hydrogen. I’ve helped put out several hydrogen fires and let me tell you, they are not easy to extinguish unless you have large quantities of steam, nitrogen, and dry chemical fire extinguishers at your house.

    • @debbies3763
      @debbies3763 Před rokem +12

      MY BB GUN TAKES 325 BAR 4235 PSI, BRAND NEW HUNTING RIFLE.

    • @robertmudrow8034
      @robertmudrow8034 Před rokem +19

      Yes, odd she didn't even mention the Hindenburg

    • @RogerCaiazza
      @RogerCaiazza Před rokem +101

      What could go wrong with a colorless, odorless explosive gas leak?

    • @asdassdgfdf7509
      @asdassdgfdf7509 Před rokem +73

      You can't really put out hydrogen fire with any of those chemicals. Hydrogen will burn until there is no more. The thing is since hydrogen is such a small bugger it's density is very low and it's buoyancy is very high thus if you have a small ventilation at the top of your garage it would be sufficient for it to not get concentrated enough to make an explosive concentration. This makes hydrogen relatively safe when compared to LPG types of gasses which are denser than air.

    • @kevinstenger4334
      @kevinstenger4334 Před rokem +66

      @@asdassdgfdf7509 we put them out all the time in the plant. Most of the time it was small leaks on valve packings and we used steam hoses to cut off the oxygen with steam. Whenever a vent stack would light off we had nitrogen piped into the stack that we opened up to put those out. And the toughest one was a 14’ diameter flange that was in a really tight place to reach and we used a team of 6-8 guys with steam hoses to push the flame back into a corner where we couldn’t reach any further from below then a guy from the next floor up could finish it off with a big 500# wheeled unit dry chemical fire extinguisher shooting it down through the steel grating.

  • @scomo532
    @scomo532 Před 9 měsíci +45

    I worked with fuel cells for 10 years back in the 1990s. We were trying to developers alternative catalysts that could replace Pf. We failed. Work has proceeded with Pt and now high surface area catalysts require less Pt than ever. The downside is the high surface area is very energetic, so the Pt migrated to lower the energy, which reduces the activity of the catalyst. It’s a no win situation. For a long time savy FC engineers used to say, “Like Mexico, fuel cells will always have a bright future”

    • @abdell75roussos
      @abdell75roussos Před 4 měsíci

      Where was it you worked?

    • @scomo532
      @scomo532 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@abdell75roussos I worked for a small R&D company that was founded by a scientist who has worked for years for the fuel cell division of United Technologies. What’s your pedigree?

    • @karlstruhs3530
      @karlstruhs3530 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Small chemically made compartments limiting mixing of chemicals is key to limiting "migration" work on fencing in your livestock, so to speak.

    • @scomo532
      @scomo532 Před 3 měsíci

      @@karlstruhs3530 Dream on my friend, dream on

    • @matthewdancz9152
      @matthewdancz9152 Před 25 dny

      Just don't use fuel cells.

  • @lawman3966
    @lawman3966 Před 8 měsíci +42

    An additional issue regarding green hydrogen is that of efficiency. According to all sources I've seen, the electricity to H2 conversion, to transportation of H2, to fuel cell/electricity output yields about one third of the electricity used for electrolysis in the first place.
    This suggests that it would be more efficient to use battery-electric vehicles (BEV) in place of fuel cell electric vehicles (FCEVs), which is why BEVs are much more widely used these days. One exception applies in situations where it is impractical or cost ineffective to implement an electrical connection between a wind turbine and an electric grid. This is done is Scotland where some turbines are located on islands where the economies of scale don't justify installing a cable connecting the turbine to the grid.
    All in all, it seems to me that hydrogen has been massively overhyped, especially when many of our media platforms and much of the public is under the misimpression that hydrogen is an energy source.

    • @niklar55
      @niklar55 Před 3 měsíci +2

      A gas cylinder costs a lot less than a battery!

    • @calamityjean1525
      @calamityjean1525 Před 3 měsíci +5

      @@niklar55 Maybe so, but we would also need a lot more of them. The gas cylinder will wear out relatively quickly because of hydrogen embrittlement while lithium ion batteries that haven't been routinely overcharged or undercharged are almost like new at ten years old.

    • @niklar55
      @niklar55 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@calamityjean1525
      Agreed.
      maybe once cylinders are more widely used, ways to protect them from embrittlement will be found, or alternative materials.

    • @calamityjean1525
      @calamityjean1525 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@niklar55
      We can hope so, but don't hold your breath.

    • @niklar55
      @niklar55 Před 3 měsíci

      @@calamityjean1525
      I would imagine that the best way to utilise H cylinders would be to change the whole cylinder, as is the practice with gas forktrucks, and similar.
      Then it will be the gas vendors responsibility to use non-destructive testing to be sure they are safe to reuse.
      .

  • @Thomas-gk42
    @Thomas-gk42 Před 5 měsíci +17

    Thank you for your busy research work and a scientific view on the topic. Also your quiz is pure fun 😊

  • @mitsterful
    @mitsterful Před rokem +43

    You've made a lot of good points, Sabine. Unfortunately, I haven't really learned anything new since I work for a glass company and we've done trials which attempt to burn hydrogen in our furnaces instead of LNG. Indeed, the UK government has put together funding for such projects, which enabled us to do the hydrogen trial, so that hydrogen is not just for cars but also used in the so-called 'foundation industries' like concrete, steel and in our case, glass.
    Glass furnaces run 24/7 for around 10-15years, constantly burning gas. There are usually around 6-8 gas ports in a furnace and the hydrogen trial only used one of ports while the others continued with gas. Even then, the trial could only be run for a few hours at a time since there was not enough hydrogen (we used largely grey hydrogen; blue is rare and green almost non-existent) i.e. we speak of hydrogen in the context of cars, but in the context of the most carbon-intensive industries, where we arguably need to decarbonise the most, there is simply not enough hydrogen, let alone green hydrogen. This is partly because of the energy difference with gas you mentioned, hence more hydrogen is needed, and also the fact that such 'foundation industries' are some of the biggest greenhouse gas emitters and hence require the most fuel.
    Nuclear power is looking more and more like the only way forward, in combination with renewable energy.

    • @traumflug
      @traumflug Před rokem +2

      Thanks for the insight. Given production of green hydrogen is a very young business, one can't really expect such hydrogen being abundantly available. Still your experiments are well done, because it confirms one can replace fossil gas without your industry collapsing.
      What I always miss in reports like this one of Sabine, is a projection into the future. Solar and wind are currently one of the most steeply growing industries, with growth rates like 30%/year. Given this, it isn't hard to imagine that there will be a whole lot of surplus electricity on windy and sunny days in a couple of years, and that's where green hydrogen will come from.

    • @scottslotterbeck3796
      @scottslotterbeck3796 Před rokem +2

      Yup, nuclear. Clean, safe, always on, renewable.

    • @mitsterful
      @mitsterful Před rokem

      @@traumflug It's not just a matter of quantity of green electricity, it's also the infrastructure for hydrogen. How do you store it? Where is it being made? How do you transport it? The UK government has invested in something called HyNet which will attempt to do exactly what I've pointed out. However, this will only be based in north west England and it is for blue hydrogen, not green. Even then it looks like the hydrogen could only be a supplement to current fuel sources, rather than a replacement.
      We should aim for green hydrogen, but if we don't have a realistic view of hydrogen we will likely keep giving benefits to fossil fuel companies, as pointed out in Sabine's video.

    • @qinby1182
      @qinby1182 Před rokem +3

      Thing is ...
      Since to make Green Hydrogen you lose 50% of energy (electricity) just by the conversion.
      Could just use electricity to start with.

    • @traumflug
      @traumflug Před rokem

      @@mitsterful So you do see a network for blue hydrogen being established, but can't imagine this blue hydrogen eventually being replaced by green hydrogen as renewables ramp up? Come on, such an imagination isn't that hard.
      Before the 1970s, a stuff called _Coal Gas_ or _Town Gas_ was widely established. This was some 50% hydrogen. Which pretty much answers how to handle hydrogen: just remember how we did it back then.

  • @jgp6711
    @jgp6711 Před rokem +336

    This is a great example of why we should expect any problem to be more complex than it appears a first glance. Thanks.

    • @kris6038
      @kris6038 Před rokem

      Also why whenever the establishment tells you there's an easy band-aid fixture to a massive, multi-dimensional problem like climate change, you know they're pulling a fast one

    • @RPSchonherr
      @RPSchonherr Před rokem +5

      I think these issues are more easily solvable than the same issues that lithium batteries have.

    • @gasdive
      @gasdive Před rokem +22

      @@RPSchonherr if you think that then you don't know much about either hydrogen or batteries.

    • @RPSchonherr
      @RPSchonherr Před rokem +5

      @@gasdive I probably know more than you, but why don't you regale me with your immense knowledge.

    • @sjsomething4936
      @sjsomething4936 Před rokem +20

      @@RPSchonherr I’m confident that the embrittlement problem alone means this technology is a niche one at best. Having to replace the tank and valves for containment systems will make this quite expensive, and the potential for a 700 bar bomb going off due to hydrogen embrittlement is one thing that insurers will charge handsomely for. Add to that the weight of the system and it’s essentially a non-starter for at least passenger vehicle applications. I can see potential for trains, ocean transport vessels and perhaps energy storage systems in place of lithium ion battery mega-pack type of solutions. Or for space applications, where the weight of a lithium ion battery is a prohibitive launch expense vis-a-vis the weight.
      The other thing that Sabine didn’t mention, and I’m not sure why, is that hydrogen will escape from any container that you store it in over time. It’ll leak around the valves and right through the metal skin of the container due to the size of the hydrogen molecules. So storing it for any length of time is not practical.
      The best hope for hydrogen is the possibility of a new intermediate form of storage (look up hydrogen grey goo) where it’s essentially combined into a gel / paste format that can be utilized. This still doesn’t solve the problems with PEM exchanger material rarity (for direct electricity generation), but maybe it could be directly combusted, that is something I’m not certain of.
      The one thing I am convinced is true is that BIG OIL is powering most of the discussion, research etc. on hydrogen in a failing attempt to keep themselves relevant and profitable.
      Trust me, I have a bunch of shares in Ballard Power (for probably going on 20 years now), which is a Canadian hydrogen fuel cell company so I wish this weren’t true, but I’m fairly certain that the hydrogen economy is something we’ll never see in our lifetime.

  • @petertgeorgiev
    @petertgeorgiev Před 8 měsíci +4

    Amazing work as always! I would like a follow up including the LOHC, current development of the technology, pros and cons etc. Thanks in advance!

  • @energyexecs
    @energyexecs Před 8 měsíci +4

    ..I am working on projects here in Northern California whereby we plan to use Wind and Solar power plants to power hydrolyzers to create hydrogen. I am also working on hydrogen fueled backup generators. I worked in the petroleum industry, the renewable power industry, and the electric and gas industry. I also work in the reliability, resiliency and power quality industry. One of my peers in the petroleum industry and I had a conf call we discussed how the traditional fuels are "bridge fuels" into the 2050 and beyond whereby in the near future we will see the more advanced fuels start emerging as a result of scarcity, price, ESG, and market demands play a stronger role - for example, my team and I install large MW backup R99 Diesel but customers are already asking for hydrogen fueled backup generators.

  • @charles.e.g.
    @charles.e.g. Před rokem +169

    Sabine, this video is such a marvelous example of when I didn’t realize a topic truly interested me until I listened to you talk about it. That’s a sign of a brilliant teacher. This has occurred a number of times with your extraordinary videos, and each time this happens you help to broaden my world beyond what I had ever conceived or considered. Thank you for sharing this rare and precious gift with us. 🙏

    • @jjoshua69
      @jjoshua69 Před rokem

      czcams.com/video/KhtWiK9A4ww/video.html

    • @johnsmith1474
      @johnsmith1474 Před rokem

      Why do you bother with this obsequious lathering on of worthless compliments? Try using that pea brain to generate a criticism.

    • @dirkjefferson6202
      @dirkjefferson6202 Před rokem

      well she left out two major details that make this video moot.

    • @charles.e.g.
      @charles.e.g. Před rokem +1

      @@johnsmith1474 Why are you so consumed with ugliness and vitriol towards someone you have never met? You are clearly a very damaged man. I pity you.

    • @charles.e.g.
      @charles.e.g. Před rokem +3

      @Frank Roidlight I’m really not sure what that means, but I do have a lot of respect and admiration for Professor Hossenfellder. I have learned a great deal from her. And I’m gay, so that is where my interest ends. Have a great day! 🙂

  • @RobertLBarnard
    @RobertLBarnard Před měsícem +1

    I appreciate you eloquence in explaining the huge issue with hydrogen. Thank you!
    20+ years ago in a debate between 2 coworkers & myself, I argued that hydrogen isn't a fuel source, it's a volatile storage medium. My coworkers & I worked at a servo-control manufacturer and a small number of unites were going to the experimental EV efforts.
    I remember being so frustrated trying to get the point across that most hydrogen exists in a bound state, the "energy" exists in its electrical attraction to other elements. Like tiny magnets already in contact with other magnets, you have to pull them apart to realize the energy/work that can be done by their being drawn together again.... More energy is needed to pull them apart...

  • @Default78334
    @Default78334 Před měsícem +1

    One thing I'd add regarding the storage problem is that there is substantial research funding currently going towards storing hydrogen either in sorbants or in the form of hydrides. Whether anything will come from that remains to be seen.

  • @Elemental_disarray
    @Elemental_disarray Před rokem +436

    I work as an engineer in a synchrotron, and various experimental gases are delivered. Hydrogen is one of them. A major issue with handling hydrogen is how broad a concentration it is explosive in. Interestingly it has a negative Joule-Thompson effect at room temperature ie actually heats when expanding into lower pressure.
    EDIT: Some comments correctly pointing out that negative JT won't push hydrogen to autoignition point. Edited to address this oversight (I deal with a lot of gases and got mixed up). The point is still broadly correct of H2 being a uniquely difficult gas from engineering compliance point of view.

    • @kevin_g1164
      @kevin_g1164 Před rokem +20

      Yep, not like LN2 at all. One spark (static electrical) and BOOM!

    • @Skank_and_Gutterboy
      @Skank_and_Gutterboy Před rokem +33

      Yep. The first time I believed that hydrogen has big problems was when Kelly Johnson attempted to design a hydrogen-fueled aircraft and wound up pulling the plug on the project because the idea "just has no go". His propulsion chief that wound up taking over Skunk Works when Kelly retired concurred that it was just had too many inherent problems.

    • @laus9953
      @laus9953 Před rokem

      @@Skank_and_Gutterboy does anyone know how those American military killer drones are powered?
      I've a suspicion they might use a type of solid bound hydrogen, which was presented at the hannover fair around 10 years ago by a UK research institute, who have gone rather quiet soon after except an interview about their technology use for drones..
      czcams.com/video/uyRwXtskT_E/video.html
      czcams.com/video/p6wqwAGWx0E/video.html

    • @stianyttervik9070
      @stianyttervik9070 Před rokem +14

      The autoignition point is far above the little trough in the JT koeff. This smells like BS.

    • @Skylancer727
      @Skylancer727 Před rokem +11

      @@stianyttervik9070 Depends what the pressure in the tank was. Considering he's saying it's a large scale business, these are likely industrial tanks of 10,000psi.

  • @christeankapp6549
    @christeankapp6549 Před rokem +227

    a good vid on Hydrogen. As an engineer working in Power and compression in the Oil & Gas industry in Houston, I can add one more insight. Methane is easily transportable in pipleine. Easy still means you easily need a hundred Megawatts in a modern, large pipeline. The molewight of Mathane is 16+, most pipeliens have a methane mix slightly higher thn this. Hydrogen's moleweight is about 2. A factor of at least eight which increases the head and the power requirement by the same factor, everything else being the same this is linear. So now if we complete the back of the envelope calculation we need nearly a Gigawatt of energy instead of a 100 MW, increasing CO2(e) emissions significantly, so Hydrogen is effectively not transportable with any environmental effectiveness.

    • @dodiewallace41
      @dodiewallace41 Před rokem +49

      Reducing dependence on hydrocarbons requires an equally effective substitute, and that's not easy. We hear a lot about the negative impacts of oil and gas without recognizing the benefits. At this point, the only effective scalable substitute available is nuclear power.

    • @deltalima6703
      @deltalima6703 Před rokem

      @Dodie Wallace Thats a lie. There are a lot of sources of energy around besides nuclear.
      Fossil fuels are a source of energy, but if you add energy to a system, especially if that causes the sun to also add more energy, then that system is going to get hot. Talking about benefits when your species is headed for extinction is dumb.
      A few azolla species climate changed themselves off the face of the planet, its naive to think it cant happen to us.

    • @moazz5779
      @moazz5779 Před rokem +8

      @@dodiewallace41 true

    • @wktodd
      @wktodd Před rokem +3

      Yes point well made 8⁠-⁠) methane has thr advantage of being useable with existing infrastructure, thus saving a huge amount of capital and offsetting conversion efficiency

    • @scribblescrabble3185
      @scribblescrabble3185 Před rokem

      @@wktodd but Methan leakage is even today a big contributing factor to GHG emissions already. Which is why we want to get away from it.

  • @JacquesdeSelliers
    @JacquesdeSelliers Před 3 měsíci +10

    One important factor that has been overlooked in this video is the appalling efficiency of the "green hydrogen" production, transport and use cycle.
    According to the sources I've seen, total efficiency is more like 20% to 30% in the real world:
    - Electricity to hydrogen: yield 50% to 75% (= around 50% to 25% losses)
    - Compression, storage, transport, etc: yield around 80% (= around 20% losses - can be much more in some on sources or depending on the routes taken)
    - Hydrogen to electricity (fuel cell): yield 50% (= around 50% losses)
    ==> total efficiency: around 20% to 30% (= (50% to 75%) * 80% * 50%)
    This means that one needs 3 to 5 wind turbines to produce the "green hydrogen" needed for the equivalent of 1 wind turbine of final electricity... and this at an outrageous production cost!
    This also means that Battery Electric Vehicles (BEVs) are a much better solution than Fuel Cell Electric Vehicles (FCEVs).
    Indeed, the equivalent electricity yield for BEVs is around 85% to 90%:
    - Electricity transport and distribution: yield around 90% (10% losses)
    - Lithium battery storage and release: yield around 90% to 95% (10% to 5% losses)
    So BEVs are about 3 to 4 times more efficient than FCEVs.
    Also, they are inherently far less expensive.
    And the whole electricity to electricity cycle is several tens of times less expensive for BEVs than for FCEVs!
    So why on earth hasn't this "green hydrogen" idea been dropped a long time ago?
    To me, the reason is simple: greens love it, and their ideology has taken over the western world...

    • @Marcus_pePunkt
      @Marcus_pePunkt Před 23 hodinami

      Much of what you write is true. I was nodding my head often while reading your comment. However, the last paragraph quickly made me stop. That's populist bullshit.

  • @scottmactavish9716
    @scottmactavish9716 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Nextera Energy (Florida Power and Light) is building several Green Hyro plants trhoughout the US, using solar as the power source. BYW the color scale is based on the source of the energy, not the hydrogen.

  • @LFTRnow
    @LFTRnow Před rokem +52

    Sabine, this was an excellent summary. I'd add:
    1) Embrittlement concerns also prohibit/limit transportation by pipeline. It would be easier to convert it to ammonia for transport, but you won't easily get H2 back from NH3.
    2) 700 bar is a nutty amount of pressure to put in a tank in your car, it is 10,000 psi or about 3x that of a welding cylinder.
    3) LH2 is not mentioned here but is very impractical, needing to be within 20 C of absolute zero so liquid isn't the best plan either.
    4) Burning (not fuel cell use) of H2 also releases NOx as any time you burn at high temperatures in a nitrogen-oxygen atmosphere (ie Earth) you get NOx as some of it combines, so the output is not JUST water.
    5) You mentioned nuclear is by far the cheapest but the best way would be HIGH TEMPERATURE nuclear. The added heat improves the efficiency of making H2 from water, and if you do want ammonia, then it is also easily made from that extra heat. This is where molten salt reactors would shine, as well as several other designs such as HGTRs (including one in the UK).
    6) If we think the lithium shortage is bad when it comes to electric cars just picture the shortage of Pt and Ir if we make a lot of fuel cells (these metals would become even rarer (ie EXPENSIVE) than they are now.

    • @elbuggo
      @elbuggo Před rokem +3

      The whole idea is cartoonish!

    • @roger1818
      @roger1818 Před rokem +4

      Great follow up! I was going to mention the production of NOx when burning, but you already have.

    • @red-baitingswine8816
      @red-baitingswine8816 Před rokem

      (*HTGR?) (Excellent comment!)

    • @pauldietz1325
      @pauldietz1325 Před rokem +5

      The US already has 1000 miles of hydrogen pipelines. The world uses 700 cubic kilometers (at STP) of hydrogen each year. Clearly, it's possible to make pipes, tanks, valves, and other equipment to deal with hydrogen. I find the pearl clutching about hydrogen handling to be vastly overblown. Industry has been using hydrogen since the 19th century. It's not great for vehicles, but there are applications where it's very useful, even essential. Getting to a 100% renewable grid will likely greatly benefit from e-fuels like green hydrogen for rare event and possibly seasonal backup.

    • @BS-ys8zn
      @BS-ys8zn Před rokem +3

      1) embrittlement, the reason existing pipelines can't be used, new pipelines would be only less subject to H penetration, not impervious. Rules out central production .

  • @MrWildbill
    @MrWildbill Před rokem +90

    My dad was a chemist at Arco Research in the 70's and they were working on ceramic based hydrogen fuel cells but the materials for the cells was just too expensive and it did not scale well. That said, I guess I just accepted it at face value when looking at hydrogen lately and if you had asked me before this video what I thought about alternative fuels I would have listed hydrogen at the top for transportation in the future, after seeing this video I realize that I need to do a little more digging to get a more accurate picture, your video was a great start to that and an eye opener. Thanks!

    • @scottslotterbeck3796
      @scottslotterbeck3796 Před rokem +1

      Best? M85.

    • @Skylancer727
      @Skylancer727 Před rokem +1

      It's the one topic I'll agree with Elon Musk. Hydrogen is one of the worst ideas for green transport. It's honestly not much better than just using compressed natural gas, which we already have lines for.

    • @elbuggo
      @elbuggo Před rokem +1

      It is also insanely explosive. A tiny leak will blow up everything.

    • @jeffpinnock6862
      @jeffpinnock6862 Před rokem

      @@Skylancer727 I think he has now gone back on this and is now building a hydrogen car for 2024

    • @ronarnett4811
      @ronarnett4811 Před rokem +3

      @@jeffpinnock6862 Sure why not? As long as the government will give him lots of money to keep a bunch development and production engineers hanging around to be available for other purposes when they are not too busy, I'm sure it works for him.

  • @logmeindangit
    @logmeindangit Před 6 měsíci

    Sabine, thank you for making this excellent, reasoning, factual and emotionally neutral video. Since I was in 8th grade, and during science class the teacher showed water electrolysis and separated it into hydrogen and oxygen gases, I understood the basic physics that heat losses required more energy input than the energy one would get from the pure helium and pure oxygen it was used to make. So, even if hydrogen is just used for energy storage, it is not only an increased ost, but as you explained, i
    difficult - and expensive - to contain, and awkward - and again, expensive - to transport.
    Those factors *add* to the initial disqualifier of getting less energy out than was put in. But then, you touched on another fine reason to stay away from using hydrogen gas as a climate-saving hero, the dependence on availability of precious metals needed to store it in fuel cells. Those metals would be very expensive to procure, the risk of supply interruptions would make fuel cell production highly vulnerable to material shortages. Variations in demand would make it prone to wildly volatile pricing. That alone would make it a technology to avoid.
    And yet another enormous burden to adopting hydrogen as a fuel or energy storage substance would be
    1. the additional cost of a manufacturing facility - the land, buildings, machines, employees and all the overhead taxes, fees, maintenance and more.
    2. Next, the cost of storage and transporting to reach the consumer or consuming site, which would mean creating equipment and infrastructure for storage and transport of the gas, and the same added costs of land, buildings, machines, people, taxes, fees, and more. And as you pointed out, hydrogen is nasty, causing hydrogen embrittlement in metals (I worked for many years in engineering with titanium in surgical instrument design and production, and hydrogen embrittlement was a factor to consider when using wire EDM in water to cut it.
    Back to my 8th grade science class... when the teacher burned the hydrogen collected in a test tube, he talked about heat losses that occured when making hydrogen by electrifying water. He said that due to those heat losses, you had to put more energy in than you got out. That one thing told me making hydrogen for fuel was a losing proposition, and for energy storage, fossil fuel was by far a better choice, even from an ecological view.
    I would like to know what entrepreneurs are investing their own money to develop hydrogen gas production. Of *course* governments will step up and spend taxpayer dollars on these type of losing propositions. They don't have their OWN money at risk, and can always get more when *this* money runs out. Just reach into the taxpayer pocket, their checkbook, or have the FED print money and give it to them.
    The state I live in is spending tens of millions of dollars annually on on hydrogen energy. I would like to call it production, or development, but I haven't seen anything material developed from the groups and committees there spending their money on. At this point it is just supporting many employees, with the only energy product being exhaled air warmed to the upper 90° F area. And that is being used to power nothing Beyond trying to justify their seat on those committees.

  • @Telyron
    @Telyron Před 24 dny +1

    There is a polymer alternative to platinum and iridium proton exchange membranes, it’s just the problem of the solid electrolyte that still needs a solution.
    About energy density you need also to consider the fact that a hidrogen fuel cell is about 90% efficient while gasoline engines only 20%

  • @Timcot24
    @Timcot24 Před rokem +35

    Worked on this 20 years ago and as we have a massive wind resource. Around three speculative organisation approached us about creating and exporting hydrogen. However studies done by a major UK university citing storage problems, (they were using WW2 barrage balloon hydrogen tanks) poor electrolyser efficiency and the cost of Pt coupled with catalyst contamination scuppered these plans. Your video has reinforced our findings.

    • @breckfreeride
      @breckfreeride Před rokem +3

      Not only that but you'd use up all the platinum on the planet in a year...

    • @jasonrichard7560
      @jasonrichard7560 Před rokem

      Is deuterium made or extracted?

    • @jasonrichard7560
      @jasonrichard7560 Před rokem

      @@breckfreeride what about carbon? (conductivity lacks in comparison to platinum) and how easy would it be to organize hydrogens electrons and neutrons?

    • @breckfreeride
      @breckfreeride Před rokem +1

      @@jasonrichard7560 someone smarter than me could probably answer that one. All I know is the current fuel cells would deplete the world's supply of platnium quickly.

    • @Arturo-lapaz
      @Arturo-lapaz Před rokem +2

      Add a safe additional step: Where you produce that , 'hydrogen with the color of your choice' combine it , the hydrogen with co2 from a convenient sorce, say from an intended sequestration plant, or better directly , apply the Sabatier reaction to, slightly exothermally produce fresh water and methane, also called natural gas, pipe it to existing consumers, or liquefy it at -162 into storage tanks slighly pressurized to ¼ atmosphere and export it on LNG ships .
      If you need to generate power with this RECYCLED co2 run combined cycle gasturbines with the really efficient aeroderivative high tecnlogy units built by General Electric, just like they do in España for decades.
      Here hydrogen plays the role of making co2 not cumulative but RECYCLABLE
      A win win situation.
      This is, by the way the in situ rocket fuel production for the Mars bound explorers
      The great Elon Musk is planning for that, in response of Dr Robert Zubrin, the originator as proved
      by NASA funded tests.

  • @RWBHere
    @RWBHere Před rokem +204

    Thanks for pulling all of this information together, Sabine.
    I've been trying to tell people for several years that Hydrogen is problematic because of its sources, production methods, transportation and storage, let alone because of the inefficiency of using it in fuel cells or in combustion engines. This video will be shared at every opportunity.
    A few more considerations are:
    1) The Hydrogen storage vessels in cars have a life expectancy of only 5 years before they will need replacing for safety reasons.
    2) When transferring H₂ to the vehicle, the speed of transfer is also constrained
    by thermal issues.
    3) A storage tank at a filling station has to be larger and much more expensive than the tanks for storing gasoline or Diesel fuel.
    4) The Oxygen used in fuel cells really needs to be very pure, but air is not pure Oxygen. This leads to accelerated degradation of the fuel cell membranes.
    5) If the Hydrogen is burned in a combustion engine, the exhaust is not pure water; it also contains Nitrates, because of the Nitrogen in the air in the combustion chamber.
    6) It's also worth remembering that water vapour is an efficient greenhouse gas.
    7) Overall efficiency of the Hydrogen-powered car alone, ignoring all other stages of the Hydrogen processing, is only about 21%, comparable to the efficiency of a petrol car. But the efficiency of the systems in a fully electric car is roughly 71%.
    That inefficiency, coupled with the high costs of production and storage, along with the dubious sources of Hydrogen and of the catalysts, mean that Hydrogen can never replace fossil fuels or displace battery electric vehicles, unless drivers are willing to pay a much higher price for their fuel, and are prepared to continue to breathe polluted air which will shorten their lives.

    • @danilooliveira6580
      @danilooliveira6580 Před rokem +17

      1) 5 years life expectancy is not that bad
      2) that is the same problem natural gas powered cars have, you get less mileage when its hot, and millions of people us it.
      3, 4, 5 are right, but improvable
      6) it is, but its also not that simple. water vapor doesn't stay in the atmosphere like CO2 or methane, it condenses back into rain, the amount of water vapor that can stay in the atmosphere before it gets saturated is actually directly related to temperature.
      7)I would love to know where you got that number. from the estimations I've seem it can be anything from 30 to 50% depending on how you make the hydrogen, how you store it, and how efficient the fuel cells are. aren't you confusing with the loses from creating the hydrogen ? they are around 20%.

    • @n0validusername
      @n0validusername Před rokem +1

      The nitrogen already exists, just in a different state. You aren't creating anything new. Source and means is where focus should be. The water vapor would not be nearly the problem if there was enough mature vegetation to absorb it. Take a good look at the virgin forest map from Columbus to today anywhere in the Americas and imagine what the rest of the world once looked like, and replantings do not have nearly the same effect. Life is going to continue to shorten until the numbers of people running around drops dramatically or mutation occurs where only that which adapts survives.

    • @danilooliveira6580
      @danilooliveira6580 Před rokem +9

      @@n0validusername no, there is more than enough earth for many times today's population to live sustainably. the problem is not overpopulation, its overconsumption and inefficient use of resources and space.

    • @deinauge7894
      @deinauge7894 Před rokem +24

      @@n0validusername "the nitrogen already exists, just in a different state". yes and the state - the molecule which is a part of - is exactly what matters. Nitrogen gas (N2) does nothing, Nitrogen oxides and Nitrogen-Hydrogen molecules do cause proplems.

    • @jjoshua69
      @jjoshua69 Před rokem

      czcams.com/video/KhtWiK9A4ww/video.html

  • @davidholder3207
    @davidholder3207 Před 7 měsíci +8

    Thanks for that. Quite interesting.
    Be interested if you'd produce a video on Ammonia powered car engines.

  • @martinrahm8597
    @martinrahm8597 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Hi Sabine. Almost all of the issues you mention (save maybe the catalyst, I have not kept up to date with development) have been solved if one considers a chemical carrier of the hydrogen, such as methanol. Direct methanol fuel cells were championed by George Olah (Nobel Laurate, chemistry) quite a while back, and is a real alternative. More popular with chemists than politicians seemingly. Pure H2 is clearly problematic, but maybe make an episode on alternative hydrogen carriers (notably MeOH)? Also: maybe mention there is a big difference between combustion reactions and electrochemical reactions - the latter is considerably more efficient. Thx for great content.

    • @cyberiankorninger1025
      @cyberiankorninger1025 Před 8 měsíci

      Methanol is great and I agree that putting P2G into more stable forms for transport and storage is the way to go but that only makes the economics of it all harder as it further decreases efficiency and needs more steps in all of the infrastructure.
      And economics and large scale production is the main problem at this point. Since you are also German I see such a high disparity between the planned economy goals that want to push production of Green Hydrogen from solar/wind as the solution to our long term problems and reality.
      The problems of fluctuation of energy supply are obvious and without a solution on the horizon. Meanwhile the whole hydrogen future would work if electricity truly becomes super abundant and extremely cheap. Yet Germany has shown that this promise of electricity getting cheaper and more abundant with solar and wind has exactly NOT happened. And its not changing in the coming years either production costs of getting wind/PV plants up are already increasing and there is resource and cost inflation issues while grid services cost are going up all the time. And power from natural gas as the best peak plant complement to solar/wind has become even more expensive than it already was by recent geopolitics.
      I really want us to arrive in a low energy price future but I don't see how we get there without some fundamental new miracle breakthroughs which unfortunately are not guaranteed.

  • @SanePerson1
    @SanePerson1 Před rokem +466

    The overwhelming number of chemists who have been hearing hydrogen-research colleagues talking about the "hydrogen economy" have been rolling our eyes for decades. Very few chemists ever bought into the hype - you do a good job explaining why.

    • @SykoEsquire
      @SykoEsquire Před rokem

      The same hefty skepticism is the same for fusion energy. The problem with “miracle” energy sources are all down on fundamental levels.
      So to the uninitiated, these miraculous energy sources seem like magical solutions, because that’s all they are is “magic”, nothing more than expensive smoke and mirrors to drive a narrative.

    • @michaelangove9841
      @michaelangove9841 Před rokem +18

      Yes...and many of those same chemists said you could never pack 100kWh charge into personal lithium-ion battery packs either. Then Elon Musk happened.

    • @lexus4tw
      @lexus4tw Před rokem +41

      @@michaelangove9841 no one ever said this, it was just too expensive

    • @michaelangove9841
      @michaelangove9841 Před rokem +5

      @@lexus4tw of course. Cost is always the limiter. They (sort of) solved it with batteries but only with sig enginerring. Who's to say same won't happen w/H2?

    • @SanePerson1
      @SanePerson1 Před rokem +39

      @@michaelangove9841 No, those are two different groups of chemists. Materials chemists weren’t negative on the potential for Li ion batteries at all. I know this well since I went to the conferences where John Goodenough and Stan Whittingham presented their work on batteries (Elon Musk uses their work - he was smart enough to understand the potential it had, but did nothing fundamental in battery development). Materials chemists have been rolling their eyes over ‘hydrogen salesmen’ for a long time.

  • @elboon_80
    @elboon_80 Před rokem +133

    Thanks for the comprehensive look at the hydrogen issues. I work in the RE branch, and have seen a few big companies trying really hard to incorporate H2 storage to replace Li-ion ones. As such, the cost and the H2 storage problem were already clear to me. But my ex-company was still convincing us saying it was worth it because of the blue hydrogen...now with the info in the section "the colours of Hydrogen" really shows that it was basically an attempt at green-washing! Thank you for the great video!

    • @zyeborm
      @zyeborm Před rokem +6

      Blue washing? 😜
      I was thinking the best grid scale application for hydrogen would be seasonal storage at relatively lower pressures. That or combine it with atmospheric carbon and just make methane from air and water. It'd be horribly energy inefficient but you can store the methane produced for years fairly easily and it's not too arduous to store enough for a worst case event.
      So given your Green Power network will inherently have significant periods of excess capacity even energy inefficient long term storage could well be useful. (Regular batteries aren't looking too viable as yet for storing a few weeks of excess in summer for cold still dark winters)

    • @tobyb4513
      @tobyb4513 Před rokem +3

      Hydrogen is easily stored as ammonia, where the storage costs are several orders of magnitude lower than battery equivalent.

    • @zyeborm
      @zyeborm Před rokem

      @@tobyb4513 advantage of methane (especially in the short term) is there's already lots of equipment in place that can use it to make power

    • @gyrgrls
      @gyrgrls Před rokem +4

      @@tobyb4513 But how to dissociate the nitrogen? I'm asking you, because ammonia novice at it. :)

    • @tobyb4513
      @tobyb4513 Před rokem

      @@gyrgrls there are a number of methods, such as solid state ammonia generation (SSAS), but the usual method is Haber-Bosch reformation.

  • @ConversionCenters
    @ConversionCenters Před 5 měsíci +7

    Thank you, Sabine. I began studying hydrogen solutions in 1991. I agree with your conclusions. The oil and gas companies are spending a lot of money trying to turn hydrogen into a solution except it isn't. As you mentioned NASA started using hydrogen solutions in the 60's and here we are 60 years later trying to figure out how to make it work for transport....maybe not.

  • @nicolamanini
    @nicolamanini Před 8 měsíci

    Thank you, very clear & nicely explained, brava! Two extra points worth observing: 1) Putting any gas under pressure costs significant energy. This decreases the H2 overall efficiency. And makes the CO2 underground sequestration of "blue" hydrogen total nonsense. 2) Ultimately hydrogen fuel cells generate electric power. Like lithium-ion batteries. And batteries are getting so much better&cheaper, don't involve expensive Pt&Ir, don't come with heavy gas tanks... I guess point 2) is the main reason killing H2 as a viable alternative to fossil fuels.

    • @svr5423
      @svr5423 Před 2 měsíci

      Batteries are not easy to change in cars and take forever to reload.
      They are also heavy which rules out many applications.

  • @richardotheshort5277
    @richardotheshort5277 Před rokem +149

    Thank you Sabine. You and anyone that is helping you put these videos together are ... , I have to say it, a treasure for the modern world. (Sorry for the element of schmaltz in that.) These videos cut through all the hype and salesmanship we get every day. I see so many people in lectures and videos stating "facts" that are not testable. It has to be detrimental to young people who are trying to learn and contribute to science and industry. I think most of us actually want to stay grounded and not get too distracted by entertainment and conjecture. Thanks again.

    • @alexhaerens6116
      @alexhaerens6116 Před rokem +3

      Not doubting the basics of this video, still 2 remarks. First you never touch the simple solution of using hydrogen as power source by simply burning it. Instead you only talk about fuel cells converting hydrogen directly into electricity. In my opinion a car with a gastank full of hydrogen wouldn’t be that different from the present ones driving on LPG or LNG. Secondly there is being worked on solar panels that produce hydrogen directly, instead of electricity. Which could change the green production figures.

    • @jannikheidemann3805
      @jannikheidemann3805 Před rokem +3

      @@alexhaerens6116 Lubrication of internal combustion hydrogen engines is difficult, because normal engine oil is chemically altered by hydrogen.
      Maybe you have heard of "hardened"/hydrogenated fat.
      You don't want to submit your engine oil to this process.

    • @tomphillips3253
      @tomphillips3253 Před rokem +2

      My own research shows Sabine’s video to be accurate. Almost whatever energy source you think of costs money to produce and distribute for use, and introduces complexity into the mix. I think two types of energy generators should be pursued, Nuclear, and Fusion. We can do nuclear now, but fusion will take more time, even with the breakthroughs seen recently - Yet well beyond my time on earth, I think Fusion is the one to pursue for future generations. IMHO.

    • @richardotheshort5277
      @richardotheshort5277 Před rokem

      I just saw a video that introduced the company called Plasma Kinetics that stores hydrogen not in pressurized tanks, but as a solid on film or CD-like disks. Maybe your next visit to this topic could look into this ... maybe. I video I saw was a quick introduction to the company and not a technical review. So details about capacities and cost were a little sparse. Thanks for your hard work Sabine.

  • @fiveminutezen
    @fiveminutezen Před rokem +26

    I recently found your channel, and I'm loving it! I learn something new from every video I watch, and your snarky, no-nonsense style makes it even more enjoyable. This video on solar energy challenges is no exception. It's crucial to consider solar energy efficiency, cost, and the use of rare earth elements in solar panels. Developing more efficient solar cell technologies like perovskite or multi-junction cells could help improve energy conversion efficiency. Additionally, researching alternative materials for solar panels that don't rely on rare earth elements can make solar energy more sustainable and environmentally friendly.
    On a separate note, I've been exploring Fe-N-C catalysts as potential alternatives to noble metal catalysts like platinum and iridium for applications such as fuel cells. Although not mentioned in the video, their catalytic activity and stability might be lower, but the cost-effectiveness and sustainability advantages due to the scarcity and high cost of noble metals are significant. Further research into optimizing their structure, understanding aging mechanisms, and exploring new active site configurations can lead to advancements in sustainable energy solutions.
    Keep up the fantastic content! Your channel is a treasure trove of knowledge, and I can't wait for more insightful and engaging discussions on these important topics.

  • @iantrask5730
    @iantrask5730 Před 8 měsíci

    Thank you for taking the time to clarify many of the problems associated with the "Hydrogen Economy". I am only an average mechanical engineer however these points have been obvious to me for the two decades since the Hydrogen Economy began being promoted as the ultimate clean energy solution that we all need to pursue. I don't understand why thousands of PHD'd scientists have commissioned hundreds of studies worldwide, and I imagine spent millions of dollars in the process, only to arrive at these conclusions that are obvious to any basic engineer. Our collective idiocy diverts attention and funding that could be used to solve our energy problems and I am frustrated by the collective waste of resources.

    • @annoyingbstard9407
      @annoyingbstard9407 Před 5 měsíci

      You don’t understand why x studies have been commissioned earning x million?

  • @dou40006
    @dou40006 Před 7 měsíci +1

    There are research to replace Platinum, Iron/Carbon/nitrogen compound looks promising. You can burn hydrogen in ICE or diesel engine efficiently or in a gas turbine.

  • @sattyre6892
    @sattyre6892 Před rokem +166

    I'm in my 50's and I grew up thinking that Hydrogen was the way to go as an eco-friendly, yet energy rich solution to gasoline. This has been the best explanation I have heard to refute that and illustrate the problems that accompany any thoughts on hydrogen conversion. Thanks for the great videos and the simple truths put in layman terms.

    • @tarstarkusz
      @tarstarkusz Před rokem +8

      I'm in my early 50s and I remember all the happy talk in the late 90s about the "hydrogen economy" that was everywhere. I thought to myself, self, hydrogen would make a great fuel if we actually had some. Shame we ain't got no hydrogen.

    • @XavierBetoN
      @XavierBetoN Před rokem +6

      Hydrogen could be efficient if we could achieve >1 Q. And microfusion cells. Those stories we hear are speculated around this utopia. But Dr. Sabine talks about current capabilities, not possibilities. I've been following her for a while and noticed she is more realist than idealist.
      Nevertheless, we need realists to overcome other difficulties.

    • @sadev101
      @sadev101 Před rokem +4

      its still the way to go. but people just wont stop fearing nuclear powerstations to pruduce electricity and therefore also the menas to make hydrogen

    • @msimon6808
      @msimon6808 Před rokem

      @@XavierBetoN Some realism for you.
      Water vapor is the #1 Greenhouse gas. It does 3/4s of the heating according to GHG theory.
      If you can believe the theory.
      If the theory is correct water vapor alone will destroy the planet. There is on average 50 times as much water vapor in the atmosphere as CO2.

    • @XavierBetoN
      @XavierBetoN Před rokem

      @@msimon6808 Water molecule is reflective, not absorbant.

  • @maestromecanico597
    @maestromecanico597 Před rokem +46

    Thank you very much for this. Back in my nuclear days a hundred years ago (give or take) we had bulk hydrogen on site for our main generator. One night I saw the telltale glow of St. Elmo's Fire on the exhaust of the relief valve due to a small about of release. This is extinguished by a line of regulated helium to blow out the line. I followed the procedure and witnessed the biggest fireball of my multidecade power generation career. Lesson learnt: Hydrogen in the hands of Joe-sixpack is a BAD idea.

    • @joelcarson4602
      @joelcarson4602 Před rokem +13

      I quit riding motorcycles years ago because daily avoidance of death and dismemberment at the hands of the Average Motorist ceased to be fun or logical. The thought of those same drivers riding around with tanks of extremely high pressure hydrogen would be enough to convince me to never leave my house again.

    • @maestromecanico597
      @maestromecanico597 Před rokem +6

      @@joelcarson4602 The H2 fireball I unintentionally initiated was about the volume of a large, in ground swimming pool. It was big, bright and brief. I was later told the liquid H2 volume for such a reaction was between one teaspoon and one tablespoon. As a plant operator we were required to also qualify as structural firefighters. As such we interacted with offsite firefighters and coordinated pre-fire plans. We’re I an incident commander at a house fire and knew there was some quantity of compressed hydrogen in the building I would set up a perimeter and maybe a monitor stream whilst evacuating the neighborhood. I’m not sending a knockdown team nor search and rescue. A firefighter’s life is worth more than that house and it’s occupants. Think about that before parking this in your garage.

    • @jamesdriscoll_tmp1515
      @jamesdriscoll_tmp1515 Před rokem +1

      The suburban housewife that ran the alloy furnace in the wafer fab needed to light the 800c hydrogen where it mixed with atmospheric gasses to prevent the end cap from launching like a rocket into the puller instrument bank.
      Gary, my friend, saw this on several occasions, until they replaced the bic lighter with an imported spark plug. How they didn't explode the whole building i'll never know.

    • @timothyandrewnielsen
      @timothyandrewnielsen Před rokem +2

      Drugs. Drinking. Remove that from society and watch joe-sixpack turn into Albert Einstein

    • @thorr18BEM
      @thorr18BEM Před rokem +2

      @@jamesdriscoll_tmp1515 I don't know what a water fab is but I can tell you that the definition of a house-wife is someone who does not work on a water fab, unless you are saying it was in her house.

  • @wuodanstrasse5631
    @wuodanstrasse5631 Před 10 měsíci +136

    Professor Hossenfelder:
    I am an old retired physicist (plasma and QED), yet despite continuing to study constantly, my wife and I learn so much from your cogent videos. No one else can do what you do each and every episode.
    With greatest respect,
    Dr. Gerlach

    • @francis6610
      @francis6610 Před 10 měsíci +3

      So are we goona have plasma guns like in star wars eventually or what?

    • @tomeubank3625
      @tomeubank3625 Před 9 měsíci +2

      If only hydrogen were the byproduct of sequestering carbon from atmospheric methane.😢

    • @rogerstarkey5390
      @rogerstarkey5390 Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@tomeubank3625
      Using what form of energy?

    • @thefreemonk6938
      @thefreemonk6938 Před 7 měsíci

      How to become like you?

    • @alan4sure
      @alan4sure Před 6 měsíci +4

      ​@@thefreemonk6938stay in school😅

  • @Bernard-fo2qo
    @Bernard-fo2qo Před 8 měsíci +1

    Gasoline cars will have to become smaller, lighter, slower, and much more efficient. Batteries will also have to get better and less reliant on rare materials. This situation is not going to be solved quickly, or by passing an unrealistic government required phase out of fossil fuels.

  • @JohnClulow
    @JohnClulow Před 2 měsíci

    This is an excellent presentation of this subject! One energy source I did not see in it, however, is geothermal which is virtually unlimited and could be used to generate hydrogen as a transportable energy source. Another, potentially important storage option could be metal hydrides which, although heavy, offers a way to store hydrogen gas at relatively low pressures and high volumetric density much more safely than high pressure systems. So I mention these two -- geothermal energy for generation and metal hydride storage -- because I wonder if they are being included in the analytical process.

  • @martindoppelbauer7738
    @martindoppelbauer7738 Před rokem +28

    Thank you for this very informative video! I learned many new things even though I am professionally working in the field of electric cars for a long time.
    Some more fun facts about hydrogen cars: As batteries have been improved dramatically over the last 10 years and hydrogen technology has not, a modern hydrogen car (Hyundai Nexo) is actually heavier than a comparable battery electric car (Tesla Model 3). Both cars have the same driving range but the Tesla has two electric motors while the Hyundai has just one. Of course, the battery car is also much cheaper. And the cost of hydrogen fueling stations is more than 10-times more than the cost of battery fast chargers while being much less reliable at the same time. These numbers are for electric chargers and hydrogen stations that can provide the same driving range per hour of operation. We have electric chargers and battery electric vehicles today, that actually charge faster in average than hydrogen cars (Hyundai Ioniq 6 for example).

  • @NielMalan
    @NielMalan Před rokem +14

    14:10 The platinum and iridium doesn't go into making the proton exchange membranes, but into the electrodes, where they catalyse the reactions.

  • @anelson8293
    @anelson8293 Před 7 měsíci

    Very interesting video and quite informative. There is much more to this topic than most will understand and depending on the region that is producing hydrogen at a commercial level and how their infrastructure is set up will dictate the feasibility of this product. Most provinces, states, countries etc will not have an industrial complex that has the correct infrastructure in place to make this work quite yet... Example is Natural Gas.. you can pull 4 hydrogen atoms off of Nat Gas to where you only get 2 pulled off of water. So if an area has abundant natural gas, the production of hydrogen becomes a little more financially viable..... Now take Vehicles for an example... HD trucks will fit the hydrogen profile quite well and we have many fleets looking at the retrofit add-on to their present Rigs as many are betting that the future of trucking will be around Hydrogen but light duty vehicles as mentioned in the video will have other problems specifically around weather temps and fill stations, and with next generation of batteries coming out soon, the cost of elect vehicles will be something to watch for sure.
    STATIONS - Building a network of stations I have come to the conclusion will take individual plants being set up in strategic transport corridor areas to where the hydrogen produced in a specific small city or municipality will be used commercially for their own buildings and blending with natural gas to residential homes while at the same time can be tied into putting up fill stations for vehicles... The trick is to get the cost of this fuel to the same price as Diesel...without depending on subsidies for too long.... Complex issue but does have great potential..

  • @sentfrom4477
    @sentfrom4477 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Very comprehensive. Excellent summary. Two comments. First, there are plans for cars to consume hydrogen by burning (not in fuel cells). How likely is this to gain traction? Second, to note that that any hot flame, hydrogen or not, will produce nitrogen oxides in air.

  • @damienguy501
    @damienguy501 Před rokem +143

    Well done. A sobering reminder of the realities of hydrogen. I was waiting on the discussion of storage leakage due to the small molecule, but it sounds like that's the least of the problems.

    • @Patrick-857
      @Patrick-857 Před rokem

      The stuff is ridiculously dangerous too. If you have a leak, it's almost guaranteed to go kaboom when it reaches the right mixture with air, and the only way you can get it into a liquid state is getting it really close to zero degrees Kelvin, otherwise it's very bulky and has low energy density. Just another example of an old niche technology suddenly being mainstreamed by people who aren't scientists. The old becomes new. The other problem is how it's marketed to normies in news media. I've had huge arguments with people who think that hydrogen cars "run on water" not understanding that the energy has to come from somewhere, and hydrogen is just a technically challenging, impractical and highly inefficient storage medium.

    • @jaz4742
      @jaz4742 Před rokem

      Hydrogen is a corporate push for rent seeking from civilization for another century. Fk em.

    • @Patrick-857
      @Patrick-857 Před rokem +4

      @@jaz4742 "You vill own nutzing und be happy. You vill eat ze bugs, you vill live in ze pod, you vill verk in ze wagie cagie und you vill like it or else"
      Klaus Schwab (probably)
      Notice they are putting DRM, remote killswitches and "AI drink driver detection" in cars now.
      Also the new traffic cameras being installed in my country have all kinds of currently untapped capabilities, like hypothetically charging drivers for being over their travel allotment, or the congestion charge they are already talking about. Not to mention average speed fines, and an insane level of surveillance. The fact that all speed cameras just got transferred from the police to our ministry of transportation speaks volumes about where this is going.

    • @Patrick-857
      @Patrick-857 Před rokem +5

      @@jaz4742 Also your comment is hidden, CZcams thinks you committed wrongthink.

    • @idonotwantahandle2
      @idonotwantahandle2 Před rokem +2

      Possibly the 2 glaring issues are the rare metals and embrittlement. I was somewhat unaware and they seem almost insurmountable for large scale.
      I'm surprised no government has followed form by suggesting more people as a form of medium-term carbon capture.

  • @stevenleonard7219
    @stevenleonard7219 Před rokem +28

    I have got to hand it to Sabine. She has the most comprehensive assessments of technologies on the internet. Most cost/ benefit analyses don’t address the inherent issues of different technologies over the current ubiquitous technologies. Sabine does excellent breakdowns.

  • @fje1948
    @fje1948 Před 8 měsíci

    Love your videos lovely Sabine - please keep em coming. Many thanks.

  • @newsuperpowermiku760
    @newsuperpowermiku760 Před 8 měsíci

    THANK YOU FOR THE LESSON. WHAT YOU DO IS IMPORTANT. ENLIGHTENMENT ON VARIOUS SUBJECTS IS SO IMPORTANT TO THE ADVANCEMENT OF OUR SPECIES

  • @chillyfinger
    @chillyfinger Před rokem +132

    I love people who get into the details like this. I am weary of those who address the issue without bothering with the facts.

    • @Halli50
      @Halli50 Před rokem +8

      ...the facts, ALL the facts and NOTHING BUT the facts. Selective facts are as near to outright lies as one can get.

    • @rowanjones3476
      @rowanjones3476 Před rokem +3

      "I think you'll find it's a bit more complicated than that" would, I imagine, be her response to any of the hype merchants

    • @davidevans3223
      @davidevans3223 Před rokem +3

      If it was easy it would have been done long ago when it's the only real long term solution they will find better solutions we can't have nuclear planes and buses

    • @French20cent
      @French20cent Před rokem +1

      That's very german of her and I like it

    • @davidevans3223
      @davidevans3223 Před rokem

      @@French20cent Germany lol stuck in the dark ages no innovation the UK is the place for that sadly it's Germanys fault the biggest market in the world the eu isn't in the global trade war between China and the USA.
      The eu is a customer losing relevance each year as real growth it's outside the eu

  • @tehNashty
    @tehNashty Před rokem +129

    Thanks Sabine! I knew most of this, but found expressing it in a logical way problematic. Now I don't have to embarrass myself so much!
    You are my favorite science communicator of all time! I especially enjoy your subtle dead pan humor!

    • @jimcamp3464
      @jimcamp3464 Před rokem

      What about the usefulness of hydrogen for remote places like Hawaii ?

    • @tehNashty
      @tehNashty Před rokem

      ​@@jimcamp3464 The alternatives are still better ESPECIALLY in remote areas.

    • @budbud2509
      @budbud2509 Před 11 měsíci +2

      @@jimcamp3464
      Build your self a small modular nuclear like RR produce , then make
      your own H2 on site . Energy independence will be yours

    • @dustinswatsons9150
      @dustinswatsons9150 Před 11 měsíci

      @@budbud2509 this is true I like this but the more convenient method to even bother messing with hydrogen as a practical way to store it in the problem is it's so light of a material it tends to seep out if I recall properly or correctly I imagine I don't know.. furthermore anyway what about a plasma containment device that could hold a vast amount of it

    • @dustinswatsons9150
      @dustinswatsons9150 Před 11 měsíci

      @@budbud2509 I agree with this

  • @oldtrkdrvr
    @oldtrkdrvr Před 23 dny

    I am a mechanical engineer. I knew about most of the problems you mentioned years ago and I couldn't understand all the hype. I am glad someone is finally getting the information out.

  • @salomevonk8537
    @salomevonk8537 Před 5 měsíci

    I have been working on a research project at school of how we could use an anaerobic fermenter and food waste to produce methane, and then use methane pyrolysis to produce hydrogen. And therefore have a cleaner way of producing hydrogen while also reducing the need to store food waste. This video has been interesting because I now understand, that there are also problems with actually using the hydrogen too and I will use this to improve our project: so thank you!

    • @alanhaisley4870
      @alanhaisley4870 Před 4 měsíci

      The carbon in your methane is just a temporary sequestration product. Why not use the produced methane directly as a fuel? This would be a carbon neutral process and methane used directly will be much easier and cheaper than adding a hydrogen step. Also, methane -> power is known current technology; no new science or expensive handling and use processes are needed.

    • @user-ql6dq6zg6k
      @user-ql6dq6zg6k Před 3 měsíci

      Or, you could use a Fischer tropsch synthesis of the gas to create a heavier hydrocarbon, which could more easily be liquefied and which burns cleaner, like propane or butane. The issue is getting a higher amount of carbon monoxide into the input stream, but charcoal from the dried material from a digester that's pyrolyzed, then do your F-T synthesis for any wanted product, just keep it at the right ratios.

  • @ralphwagenet852
    @ralphwagenet852 Před rokem +61

    Excellent analysis. The need for platinum and iridium wasn't something I heard discussed before, but it's very relevant.

    • @meateaw
      @meateaw Před rokem +8

      It's very similar to the lithium and cobalt concerns around Bev's. All these new technologies have expensive components.
      There's a reason we ended up using combustion engines, they were cheap to make with the resources we knew how to make cheaply.
      We've done some patchup jobs where it's been easier (catalytic converters use platinum too! But those were only bolted on after the fact, and only when they were forced to)

    • @ralphwagenet852
      @ralphwagenet852 Před rokem +6

      @@meateaw Plenty of lithium is available to be mined, so it isn't going to be a concern once production facilities are ramped up. Lithium Iron Phosphate (LFP) batteries don't require cobalt and they're going to be the most commonly used battery, so cobalt won't be much of an issue either. Platinum and iridium are much more expensive and rarer than either of these, and there's no good workaround for them, so they present a much bigger issue for hydrogen fuel cells.

    • @sswpp8908
      @sswpp8908 Před rokem +1

      One thought I have is that the auto industry already uses lots of platinum for catalytic converters. A push towards electric vehicles, and away from conventional ICE, would mean that platinum would be freeing up over the next decade.

    • @1crazypj
      @1crazypj Před rokem +2

      @@sswpp8908 I believe the auto industry is using less than 10% of the platinum it was when catalytic converters were first being used.
      If it's accessible, it will just as easily be stolen, in fact even more likely if the price goes up

    • @adammillwardart7831
      @adammillwardart7831 Před rokem

      @@ralphwagenet852 Lithium is also supposedly the best material to make anodes for electrolysis.

  • @theitchyspot
    @theitchyspot Před rokem +76

    A brilliant analysis of this topic. It is amazing how Sabine manages to explain a complicated scientific topic for a broader non-scientific audience and I appreciate your efforts very much. Ty very much, Sabine.

  • @unconventionalideas5683
    @unconventionalideas5683 Před 21 dnem +1

    The only way it seems like is if some breakthrough happens in terms of fuel cell materials technology that makes platinum and iridium unnecessary.

  • @Hybridog
    @Hybridog Před 8 měsíci

    Another issue, and potentially a big one if hydrogen use became widespread, is leakage. H2 is very tiny and is very difficult to contain - it leaks a lot. H2 in the atmosphere reacts with hydroxide radicals (OH) binding them up. Normally those OH molecules gradually react with atmospheric methane, ozone, and water vapor binding up those greenhouse gases and moderating their effect. H2 does a much better job of tying up OH molecules and thus the methane and others are free to act as the powerful GHGs they are - no moderating by OH. If hydrogen use becomes ubiquitous, it's entirely feasible that climate change and warming would not improve much and might even get worse. H2 is not a solution.

  • @caligula57
    @caligula57 Před rokem +70

    Outstanding presentation. I had no idea how complicated producing Hydrogen is. It changed my "easy" view on the subject.

    • @tigris4247
      @tigris4247 Před rokem +1

      I don't know your line of work. But those of us working in science (not hydrogen) know that nothing is easy and there're always multiple reasons why things don't get done as easily as they first seem.

  • @thegzak
    @thegzak Před rokem +140

    Nice to see that you’re on a learning journey too, and not afraid to change your mind when the data points the other way. Great video!

    • @coreyham3753
      @coreyham3753 Před rokem +2

      well stated.

    • @savage22bolt32
      @savage22bolt32 Před rokem

      So kewl that the glaciers are all made of fresh water ice, so all th that water can be captured and turned into hydrogen.
      Maybe Britian will sell more than a dozen H cars nxt yr.

    • @itsgottobesaid4269
      @itsgottobesaid4269 Před rokem

      Makes you wonder why climate catastrophism is still a thing doesn’t it .

  • @stianweiseth5784
    @stianweiseth5784 Před 7 měsíci

    I was on the edge of reconsidering my stance on Hydrogen, after seeing the power density/mass ratio, particularly in the heavy transport/shipping use-case... Then I saw the rest of the video.

  • @user-hw4tf1eo6y
    @user-hw4tf1eo6y Před 7 měsíci

    I like your sense of humour above all your research and knowledge, and also because I think great minds think alike… 😊

  • @ericfielding2540
    @ericfielding2540 Před rokem +156

    I was aware of some of those problems with hydrogen power but you did a great job explaining the range of issues and how difficult they are to mitigate.

    • @introprospector
      @introprospector Před rokem

      literally just do trains holy moly

    • @NGCAnderopolis
      @NGCAnderopolis Před rokem

      @@introprospector how do trains adress the energy storage question?

    • @tristanbeal261
      @tristanbeal261 Před rokem +4

      Trains address the transport issue through having electric trains

    • @BS-ys8zn
      @BS-ys8zn Před rokem +2

      Trains are energy efficient in moving cargo. We're cargo too .other than that,

    • @ericfielding2540
      @ericfielding2540 Před rokem +3

      @@tristanbeal261 Electric trains, trams, and buses can be built with wired connections to power, but they can’t reach every location where people live, work, and enjoy recreation. Some type of portable energy storage will be required for travel to more remote locations.

  • @peludoraton
    @peludoraton Před 10 měsíci +70

    Thanks a lot for the explanations Sabine. I would like to add that molecular hydrogen (H2) does not produce embrittlement on steels and other metals per se. Only monatomic hydrogen (H) does. Hydrogen embrittlement is a complex topic since there are many different cases and mechanisms... In this case, the dissociation of molecular hydrogen on the steel surface is an essential step in the embrittlement process. Not sure how engineers deal with this issue in pre-existing infrastructure design for storage and transport of natural gas

    • @LyopsiK
      @LyopsiK Před 9 měsíci +4

      That's a great point! So which form of H is used to produce power: the monatomic or the molecular? If it's monatomic, it means we need to break the molecular connection inside the power cell, right? So more energy. I'm a bit confused already.
      How stable is monatomic H? I guess the molecular state is more stable, so it would naturally tend to bond into molecules?
      You wrote: «the dissociation of molecular hydrogen on the steel surface is an essential step in the embrittlement process». Could you please explain more about this?

    • @yasirrakhurrafat1142
      @yasirrakhurrafat1142 Před 7 měsíci +5

      @@LyopsiK Most of the times, whenever we refer to any non water liquids/gases.
      Such as hydrogen, oxygen etc.
      We are indeed talking about molecular or diatomic forms of them.
      I recently looked up the same thing few days ago. As I got too excited by hydrogen's potential.
      It is hard to gauge it's potential honestly.
      Sorry for the rambling.
      H2/molecular hydrogen is indeed the form of hydrogen, used to generate.
      I suspect that even that must have an affect on metals. Thus embrittlement.
      Or maybe h2 is unstable and keeps switching between h and h2... Or maybe a few unbonded h caused embrittlement. Who knows.

    • @TravisTellsTruths
      @TravisTellsTruths Před 5 měsíci +2

      They might use aluminum.

    • @TravisTellsTruths
      @TravisTellsTruths Před 5 měsíci +2

      ​@@yasirrakhurrafat1142it's extremely good in your car, mixed with the gasoline 😊

    • @frostbyte8098
      @frostbyte8098 Před 5 měsíci +3

      Carbon fiber tanks have been developed which solve the weight and embrittlement issue.

  • @christophervannorden7134
    @christophervannorden7134 Před 3 měsíci +1

    It is so fascinating to learn about the Platinum and Iridium, necessary for enabling hydrogen fuel cell operations! I always thought an enormous advantage of hydrogen vehicles was that rare metals are not requisite for their effective functioning, as with Li-ion powered EVs. Thank you for explaining this glaring resource sustainability deficiency and the other myriad challenges inherent to developing a hydrogen economy, Dr. Hossenfelder!

  • @londonalicante
    @londonalicante Před 7 měsíci

    I agree with most of what you said but as an engineer who has worked on steam methane reformers, way too much is made of hydrogen embrittlement. If you google "Nelson Curve Hydrogen" you'll get a graph that shows that carbon steel is fine up to 200C. With higher (but relatively common) metallurgies virtually any combination of pressure and temperature can be handled.

  • @thorkildstokholm7583
    @thorkildstokholm7583 Před rokem +163

    Thank you Sabine. finally a solid walk over of this hydrogen trend. Being a thermodynamic engineer it has been and is a pain to see how the decision makers are running with a half wind.

    • @gknucklez
      @gknucklez Před rokem +7

      It is always painful to see decision makers debate over a topic you are closely familiar with. But it is not necessary their fault, they can't know everything and rely on experts opinions, who seldom come to the same conclusions.

    • @ChianTheContrarian
      @ChianTheContrarian Před rokem +9

      Decision makers need to study STEM subjects before making decisions. Hahaha. Too many decision makers do not have STEM understanding.

    • @danharold3087
      @danharold3087 Před rokem +13

      @@gknucklez There are experts and there are professional experts. The ones in the 2nd group deliver any desired out come for a cost.

    • @stephencummings7615
      @stephencummings7615 Před rokem +5

      Kind of like most environmentalists...

    • @o4pureh2o
      @o4pureh2o Před rokem +3

      @@ChianTheContrarian wouldn't the world be a different place if that were the case. Maybe they should also have experience in small business or growing.

  • @Frogmobile52
    @Frogmobile52 Před rokem +15

    I was so enthousiastic about H² before i watched your video... You killed my joy! Great video as usual, thank you, keep up the good works!

  • @davidupdegraff5234
    @davidupdegraff5234 Před 5 měsíci

    I appreciate the distinction between the costs associated with "the state of tech today" vs. "hard to imagine overcoming costs due to physical & chemical properties". The video would have benefited a lot from from a number for R.T. efficiency of kw-in vs. kw-out of a fuel cell with H2 at 700 bar. The storage & transport issues seem to squarely fall in the insurmountable, but it is not self evident to me that a fuel cell / PEM must necessarily involve platinum & iridium. Yeah, overall, where there is use for Hydrogen for it's chemical properties (eg. in reducing iron ore w/o carbon..or fertilizers, or chemical/industrial feedstock) it is fantastic to look for "green" ways to produce it. But as a "battery" for generic power it seems grim due to the compression & containment problems, at least. Admit that I'm a bit at a loss to understand the interest in a power route that already compares so poorly vs. an LFP battery.

  • @WholeCosmos
    @WholeCosmos Před 8 měsíci

    There is a thin layer of iridium at the KT boundary everywhere on earth including the US presumably the concentration is low 1-25 ppb and gets lower the further from the chixalub asteroid impact site. It maybe too expensive to extract IDK? I think we could mine it with little affect to the surface. Also something that you didn't touch on is the low temp of using liquid hydrogen makes it so fuel pumps can't have lubrication and so the pumps fail too quickly from wearing out bearing surfaces. Tanks would need to be insulated and for some reason can't be sealed pressurized and will boil off. Also petrol is significantly heavier than hydrogen in gaseous form so that offsets the extra weight of the gaseous hydrogen tank, but if the tank is made from carbon fiber hydrogen wins that battle.

  • @plausible_dinosaur
    @plausible_dinosaur Před rokem +27

    Hello and thanks Sabine, just a few corrections from me as may become usual. Hydrogen is stored in type 4 polymer tanks in vehicles, which are made from polymers without any metal. There is a big market for using it in buses as the tanks have a better weight to power ratio as they get bigger and are smaller and lighter than lithium batteries. (I guess a lower up front cost too). This looks like a good niche for them where they come out on top of competing tech.
    The idea is to uses excess wind and solar to create hydrogen to store and burn when we want instead of batteries. I think we have to start thinking of this as a two tier storage system for power grids. Much of grid power storage being done with lithium etc but emergency power being stored as hydrogen as infrequent (a few times a year) back up energy. For this it can be excellent. There is a massive 300 GIGAWATT hydrogen storage facility being built by Mitsubishi. It's another niche where it can win.
    Producing hydrogen makes nuclear / wind / solar much cheaper as the excess production is put to good use.
    There is some fake info around on hydrogen filling stations costing a lot.
    Believe it or not hydrogen transport can be done with normal gas lines, so it is an expense yes, but a few lines running up and down beside motorways is probably doable.
    Lastly it is worth looking at the German green power document which sees hydrogen as the future. Whether it will take off in any country is going to be largely due to investment or non-investment by the particular governments of those countries.
    Thanks for the article and thanks for your help last year Piers Newberry.

    • @zen1647
      @zen1647 Před rokem +5

      I'm glad someone else pointed out about heavy vehicles. Hydrogen for cars is probably not going to be practical but busses, trucks, trains, construction equipment etc. could use the large amount of energy that would make the tank and fuel cell worthwhile.

    • @hyourinmaru69
      @hyourinmaru69 Před rokem

      Thanks for pointing this caveats!
      There are also some news about using ammonia (?) as a storage system for Hydrogen. Would this work better? Do you have any info on that?

    • @hannajung7512
      @hannajung7512 Před rokem +1

      @@hyourinmaru69 this reduces efficience and causes a lot of waste, but it would allow to transport Hydrogene much safer, then the pure gas, which gets important for distances that cannot be covered via pipes.
      Some countries that could in theory produce HUGE amounts of solar energy could this way produce and ship Hydrogene to nations that have fewer abilities to produce renewable energy.
      There are certain social and environmental problems involved with that, but above anything else its not a viable solution for local energy production and storage.

    • @hannajung7512
      @hannajung7512 Před rokem +1

      It is important to understand though, that this "green power document" was written under a conservative government and was heavily influenced by lobbying of the gas industry. The idea is, that hydrogene allows for the usage of allready available infra structure, that just gets repurposed. Under this assumption it is a lot more viable then under the assumption that the structures all need to be build from scratch, as huge amounts of environmental impact and costs allways lie in the building of structures like storage facilities, pipes etc.
      Another approach were Hydrogen starts to get usage in Germany is as longterm storage for solar energy in private homes. If you place solar panels on a regular one or tow family home you produce a lot more energy, then you could use in spring and summer, combining a battery for short term storage (over night, and for a couple of rainy days) with a small hydrogene production and storage for longterm storage would allow private households of that size to heat their homes in winter with the energy they produced in summer in Germany.
      This is of course not necessarly an option for every region as average sun exposure and the number of days requiring heating are a hige factor. And it may not be an option for any housing that is more energy expensive then modern family homes. But for those it seems to work well, and pays itself of in a couple of years.

    • @Triforian
      @Triforian Před rokem +2

      Your corrections are all accurate. I'd just like to add some:
      1. Fuel cells don't use Iridium! PEM electrolyzers do, which can be paired with renewable most easily. But there are many alternatives (like alkaline electrolyzers).
      2. There are innumerable alternatives to 700 bar tanks for storage. I'd argue for Ammonia as one of the best (carbon free, tech for large scale handeling & transport exists).
      3. Transport should also be seen as a two-tiered system like the grid. Cars with (mostly) short run durations - batteries; Ships, planes and maybe heavy duty vehicles - hydrogen (or ammonia maybe).
      4. The embrittlement problem is exaggerated. It can be dealt with by using polymers (as you already mentioned) or special steel alloys, developed for ammoinia plants, where polymers can't be used.
      Also: sodium batteries are becoming available at industrial scale. You don't have to argue the slightly problematic case (in terms of the environment) of lithium batteries.

  • @mmlvx
    @mmlvx Před rokem +80

    That warning at 12:46 about the logarithmic scale was very helpful. It inspired me to put the same numbers into a spreadsheet, and graph them with a linear scale and a logarithmic scale, just to see the differences, and it was eye-opening.

    • @carlsapartments8931
      @carlsapartments8931 Před rokem +12

      Forget that nonsense... Sabine said don't leave the beer in the car overnight!

    • @paulheydarian1281
      @paulheydarian1281 Před rokem +4

      @@carlsapartments8931
      I don't drink beer. Problem Solved. 😏

    • @EuroWarsOrg
      @EuroWarsOrg Před rokem +1

      Do the same with CO2 heat absorption - you will be shocked.

    • @vincecox8376
      @vincecox8376 Před rokem

      Once they learn how to vibrate the molecules Hydrogen will be the #1 fuel source!!

    • @RetiredRhetoricalWarhorse
      @RetiredRhetoricalWarhorse Před rokem +18

      That is the basic problem with presenting data to laymen. People are only used to the term average from school days and maybe, just maybe, median. But scale and spread are two VERY important things to take into account when dealing with statistics.
      So when someone presents you bar graphs without a scale, you know they want to lie to you. If they leave out median, and spread, they might just be incompetent (cough journalists cough) OR they are still trying to hide something from you...
      I think there's a lot of higher math we should remove from basic schooling's curriculum and add statistics instead.
      Another example: "Doing X raises your cancer risk by 19%!!!" means nothing without knowing what the cancer risk was before. Because You never add that number they present you to the initial risk. If it was 20% to begin with it doesn't become 39%. It becomes about 24% (20% plus 19% of 20). If it was only 1% to begin with, the new cancer risk arrives at 1.2%.
      To determine the amount of fear you need to apply to the problem, this is QUITE significant info.

  • @herringnjd
    @herringnjd Před 7 měsíci +2

    I'm wondering if meta materials would be able to solve the cold start and hydrogen embrittlement problems. I have my doubts about a replacement for irridium though.

  • @johnfranchina84
    @johnfranchina84 Před měsícem

    I realized H2 was a problem when as a kid I read about the airship fires:
    The following is a partial list of hydrogen-inflated airships that were destroyed by fire from accidental causes (the list does not include ships shot down in combat operations):
    LZ-4 (August 5, 1908)
    LZ-6 (September 14, 1910)
    LZ-12/Z-III (June 17, 1912)
    LZ-10 Schwaben (June 28, 1912)
    Akron (July 2, 1912)
    LZ-18/L-2 (October 17, 1913)
    LZ-30/Z-XI (May 20, 1915)
    LZ-40/L-10 (September 3, 1915)
    SL-6 (November 10, 1915)
    LZ-52/L-18 (November 17, 1915)
    LZ-31/L-6 and LZ-36/L-9 (September 16, 1916)
    LZ-53/L-17 and LZ-69/L-24 (December 28, 1916)
    SL-9 (March 30, 1917)
    LZ-102/L-57 (October 7, 1917)
    LZ-87/LZ-117, LZ-94/L-46, LZ-97/L-51, and LZ-105/L-58 (January 5, 1918)
    LZ-104/L-59 (April 7, 1918)
    Wingfoot Air Express (July 21, 1919)
    R-38/ZR-II (August 23, 1921)
    Roma (February 21, 1922)
    Dixmude (December 21, 1923)
    R101 (October 5, 1930)
    LZ-129 Hindenburg (May 6, 1937)

  • @beeheart6529
    @beeheart6529 Před rokem +107

    I knew very little about hydrogen as a fuel before watching this video. Thanks for explaining even though it’s bad news.

    • @madshorn5826
      @madshorn5826 Před rokem +6

      I was super stoked about hydrogen 20 years ago when fuel cells matured and expected at least the same number of hydrogen powered cars as EVs on the road by now.
      This goes to show the difference between _theoretically_ possible, _practically_ possible and a sustainable solution.
      The Concorde was practically possible, but not sustainable and economically viable.
      Fusion is theoretically possible, but we don't know if it is practically possible (lack of tritium, ...) and certainly not if it is in a sane price range.
      Nuclear is too expensive and slow to roll out and requires a lot of knowledge and infrastructure, excluding vast parts of the world.
      Maybe we should concentrate our resources on stuff we know works like energy savings, less consumption, solar and wind with energy storages?
      It will be different, but a general slowdown will also help solve the biodiversity crisis and the pollution crisis. And give us all more free time and less stress.
      We may not be able to afford billionaires, but maybe we'll survive that blow?
      Edit: Fixed sentence. EVs was missing.

    • @Sekir80
      @Sekir80 Před rokem +5

      @@madshorn5826 I just want to emphasize one thing from your comment: energy savings. It's mind boggling how humans waste energy, mostly on inefficient buildings. Yes, they are cheap to build and not too expensive to heat in the winter and cool in the summer, but if we could build them better? Still, a lot of legacy buildings which seems very hard to insulate... I can't fathom the way out of this.

    • @theAraAra
      @theAraAra Před rokem +2

      @@madshorn5826 Would solar & wind with batteries really come under practically possible and sustainable? Afaik, batteries are used in very few places and account for only 5% of all energy storage (the rest being pumped hydro)...to speak nothing of the ecological impact of mining so much battery materials
      So we're only stuck with energy savings and less consumption. Even those are truly possible only in rich countries, not in developing ones. I mean, sure you can build public transport, dense housing, and walkable cities here in India, but you can't ask us to reduce consumption when most people are poor and per person consumption is so low.

    • @jjoshua69
      @jjoshua69 Před rokem

      czcams.com/video/KhtWiK9A4ww/video.html

    • @Sekir80
      @Sekir80 Před rokem

      @@jjoshua69 Your comment is not visible for others, but I thank you for this ammonia video. The video ID is KhtWiK9A4ww.

  • @mw-th9ov
    @mw-th9ov Před rokem +7

    An option not mentioned is to make h2 using wind or solar and then use it to make ammonia for transport in ships, rail tanks, truck tanks or pipelines. The ammonia can then be burned to make energy, for example to power cargo ships.
    Wind h2 production can be maintained using some of the h2 stored to level the ammonia making process.
    Fuel cell issue are distinct from the h2 as energy issue.

    • @randomculprits
      @randomculprits Před rokem +2

      Precisely. She's taken the absolute worst use case that at this point is known to not be viable and built the whole argument around it, as if that's the only use for hydrogen. Hydrogen in cars. It's a straw man more or less. We know hydrogen isn't viable for that. It's why almost no vehicle manufacturers pursue it at this point. Surely generates engagement though.

    • @mw-th9ov
      @mw-th9ov Před rokem +2

      @@randomculprits Directly into pipelines to replace methane seems the best case, although it would be less efficient than using the electricity directly. Ammonia is a practical first multi-use h2 based product, but will not a major dent in the total co2 picture.

    • @Validole
      @Validole Před rokem +1

      @@randomculprits problem is, car manufacturers are still coming out with both fuel cell and even Hydrogen combustion engine cars, and touting it as the future.

    • @randomculprits
      @randomculprits Před rokem +1

      @@Validole isn't that only Toyota? VW group, Ford, GM, Kia-Hyundai and others have gone BEV and have already models they sell in volume and many more in the pipelines. Even BMW that used to try ICE H2 vehicles is now making BEVs.

  • @merlin_XY
    @merlin_XY Před 8 měsíci

    For similar reasons replacing natural gas appliances with electric appliances runs into problems unless you have a nuclear powered infrastructure. You use fossil fuels to produce the electricity which produces green house gasses and other pollutants and by the time you actually use the electricity in your home you have created more green house gasses than using natural gas in your home directly would produce.

  • @mmb811
    @mmb811 Před 7 měsíci

    I LOVE your video, straight forward SCIENTIFIC FACTS mixed with some really hilarious subtle humor. Thanks 😁

  • @ri3sch
    @ri3sch Před rokem +8

    I work for a industrial gas turbine company and there’s lots of focus and push for hydrogen usage. The more I learn about it, the more I see that it’s just a way for the industry to keep doing what they are currently doing and not actually solving the overall issue

    • @Tubemanjac
      @Tubemanjac Před rokem

      In psychology that behavior is called "fleeing forward". 😏

    • @wolfgangpreier9160
      @wolfgangpreier9160 Před rokem

      The industry gets incentives from the EU, the state, interest groups from the oil industry etc. Of course they are interested to continue their work. The daughters of their CFO's wait for their new stallion. That does not finance itself.

    • @paulg3336
      @paulg3336 Před rokem +1

      The overall issue? Allow me: 8,000,000,000 humans

  • @birch8005
    @birch8005 Před rokem +40

    Clear fact-based explanation. Nowadays rare to see this. Thank you for your time and effort in making these videos.

    • @stapleman007
      @stapleman007 Před rokem +2

      I prefer videos driven by feeling, emotion, and hot air.

  • @herberttrummer4025
    @herberttrummer4025 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Thank you for this interesting video. I have 2 questions about the production of green hydrogen:
    At the beginning of the video you say that hydrogen is not an energy source, but an energy store. The fluctuating energy production with renewable energy shouldn't be a problem then, should it? The wind turbines in Germany only produce 20% of their capacity for the grid. Why can't the 80% be stored in hydrogen?
    Why is the production of H with renewable energy sources more expensive than with others? Because the cost per kWh of renewable energy is higher? That would be a problem with photovoltaics and wind generators, and nothing to do with hydrogen, right?

    • @samsonau8205
      @samsonau8205 Před měsícem

      If you REALLY think about it, every molecule is a store of energy. It's all about electrons and bonds. Sugars and petroleum have covalent bonds, while metals have ionic bonds. Each molecule is a step in the overall process of moving energy from high to low and the usual increase in entropy. Water is lower in energy than hydrogen/oxygen separately in a fuel cell...as is carbon dioxide when burning stuff. The sun via plants reverses that to recreate the higher energy molecules. In batteries, cathodes and anodes exchange electrons that produce the electrical current that gives us energy to use. To get the starting materials back, you have to ADD energy. Where does that come from?
      This video gave you the usual list of where humans currently get energy. It's all really the same problem at the end of the day. We get away with fossil fuels because HUGE amounts were created millions of years ago that are there for the taking by digging it out of the ground. We don't have to create anything except the infrastructure. Time already did the work for us. Solar/wind/hydro take the sun's energy we receive today and we can use it up almost immediately...which we can definitely do. There is no long term anymore. I've even read that the Earth won't produce new carbon fuels for us even in millions of years because life has evolved new enzymes (ligninases for example) that degrade plant material so fast that coal formation is no longer possible.

  • @Paremata
    @Paremata Před 7 měsíci +1

    Great video thanks. I'm really interested in a discussion about when we will run out of fossil fuel. Is there a video about that. Yes I was a little disappointed in the conclusion about hydrogen.

  • @patricklincoln5942
    @patricklincoln5942 Před rokem +20

    Yes. You changed my mind about hydrogen. The Iridium Platinum problem is a huge issue.

    • @savagesarethebest7251
      @savagesarethebest7251 Před rokem

      Go and get an asteroid. Also the whole world has iridium in the form of the geological boundary from when the dinosaurs went extinct

    • @patricklincoln5942
      @patricklincoln5942 Před rokem +1

      @@savagesarethebest7251 I thought about the asteroid. I think that is likely to far off into the future to relieve us of the climate mess we have left for ourselves. The KT-boundary is thinned out all over the globe as you point it. This makes it far to expensive to mine.

    • @gerbre1
      @gerbre1 Před rokem

      Hydrogen is needed for the energy transition. No fuel cells and Platinum required.

    • @patricklincoln5942
      @patricklincoln5942 Před rokem

      @@gerbre1: Do you mean for direct burning, like as a substitute for using coal to melt iron to produce steel?

    • @gerbre1
      @gerbre1 Před rokem +1

      @@patricklincoln5942 Yes, direct burning in a combined heat and power plant or in a jet engine. Airbus together with CFM is developing such a jet engine for the A380. But Airbus is also considering the fuel cell, no final decision yet.

  • @fredygump5578
    @fredygump5578 Před rokem +16

    About 15 years ago I talked to an engineer who was working on a fuel cell program. He was tired of it and hoping his company would give it up.

    • @Sekir80
      @Sekir80 Před rokem +1

      Wow, what an enthusiastic look on the topic!

    • @janami-dharmam
      @janami-dharmam Před rokem

      Fuel cells have come a long way. High temp fuel cells are expensive but quite efficient. Rare earths are the future for electrodes and electrolytes

    • @Sekir80
      @Sekir80 Před rokem

      @@janami-dharmam High temp, meaning high temperature? So, a pre-heating needed like on EVs battery packs?

    • @fredygump5578
      @fredygump5578 Před rokem +1

      @@Sekir80 When people know their project is going nowhere, they lose enthusiasm. BTW, did you even watch the video? If you did, you might understand why lack of enthusiasm is warranted.

    • @fredygump5578
      @fredygump5578 Před rokem

      @@janami-dharmam I feel like you didn't fully comprehend the substance of this video.

  • @donaldzinn2927
    @donaldzinn2927 Před měsícem

    I love the knowledge!!❤️ Sabine you are true educator!!
    You bring a certain joy in the way you narrate the facts!!😵‍💫

  • @user-hw4tf1eo6y
    @user-hw4tf1eo6y Před 7 měsíci

    H2 combustion engine may be a solution too; however, one has to sacrifice efficiency, but if one can get electricity from Nuclear energy and say we have a supply of water(not ground water) but from harvesting rain water etc or from rivers then we could have enough H2 produced from Nuclear Energy. The water vapour generated will have the same green house (GH) effect, rather more now than CO2 as water vapour has naturally greater GH effect that CO2. Eventually, a new equilibrium will come about in the earths atmosphere, and so the cycle will continue. I can write a book on this…

  • @staninjapan07
    @staninjapan07 Před 9 měsíci +54

    Another informative and easy to understand 20-minute lesson. Thanks so much for these.

  • @samoneil1938
    @samoneil1938 Před rokem +34

    There is an article that can be found online that reports on some research undertaken by the Imperial College London, where they have managed to develop a hydrogen fuel cell that does not require platinum or iridium. There is clearly a lot more work to be done to resolve many of the issues you outlined in your video though, thank you very much for putting this research together.

    • @yannickproulx8519
      @yannickproulx8519 Před rokem +4

      But, we have to take into account that BEV technology will continue to evolve also. And will always still be more simple than FCEV tech. Maybe that H have it use, but not for personnal transportation.

    • @aries6776
      @aries6776 Před rokem

      lol I just posted about this above. Yes it uses Iron which is cheap and available.

    • @aries6776
      @aries6776 Před rokem +1

      @@yannickproulx8519 It can be stored and transported safely. The technology exists and it's not expensive.

    • @samoneil1938
      @samoneil1938 Před rokem +1

      I think that hydrogen technology is probably going to be better utilised as a large scale storage solution (Transportable energy storage at that) rather than a fuel for transportation. BEVs have their issues too though, but obviously further improvements to battery chemistry and energy density in the future could alleviate some of the weaknesses of BEV tech (Primarily the range for vehicles with heavy loads).

    • @aries6776
      @aries6776 Před rokem

      @@samoneil1938 Why not for fueling vehicles? Micro fibre hydrogen storage addresses that problem entirely. Low pressure, high density, lightweight and cheap. It's perfect for hydrogen powered transport to become prevalent.

  • @teletesselator
    @teletesselator Před 7 měsíci

    I dunno why more people don't use H from H2O(plus salts) in their cars. You can use the alternator and battery to power the process of electrolysis (breaking H2O into H, H, and O) and cut the use of gasoline in half - generally speaking. Some tinkerers claim 100% - many people achieve between 50 and 75%. The needed salts are super cheap and a few gallons or regular old tap water can last for more than several hundred miles in the worst case.

  • @kaursinghi6030
    @kaursinghi6030 Před 7 měsíci +2

    How well made and well researched is the video. ChatGPT couldnt even scratch the surface when asked for similar information.

    • @riobimap3567
      @riobimap3567 Před 5 měsíci

      saya yakin dimasa depan ada seseorang penemu hydrogen pengamanan

  • @I.amthatrealJuan
    @I.amthatrealJuan Před rokem +185

    I'm rubbing my hands in excitement as Sabine has finally covered hydrogen "energy", one of the most overhyped "solutions" postulated these days.

    • @area51z63
      @area51z63 Před rokem

      LOL so you are spending your life waiting for Sabine to speak. Whaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
      Tards are everywhere

    • @ilyarepin7750
      @ilyarepin7750 Před rokem +12

      hydrogen isnt an energy source ifs a storage medium. It makes more sense than electric batteries because existing engines can be converted to burn hydrogen, no long charging times, fuel density comparable to fossil fuels, and ao on. If we had nuclear reactor based energy grid we could use the waste heat to make hydrogen like the Japanese proposed recently.

    • @fuselpeter5393
      @fuselpeter5393 Před rokem +7

      @@ilyarepin7750 How can you come to this conclusion after watching this video? Your first sentence is right tho.

    • @jhunt5578
      @jhunt5578 Před rokem +13

      @Ilya Repin Battery tech is already more efficient than engines and hydrogen fuel cells. The overwhelming majority of EVs are charged at home, its like having a petrol pump at your house and you wake up with a full tank. Besides battery tech is improving charging speeds, density and cost. The potential of hydrogen fuel efficiency is 40% max.

    • @stevemickler452
      @stevemickler452 Před rokem +1

      I read about another possibility by a company called Proton Technologies in which depleted oil wells or coal mines make hydrogen by partial combustion deep underground using air pumped from the surface and keeping the CO, CO2 underground. The costs they project are a small fraction of other methods.

  • @babel_
    @babel_ Před rokem +10

    Wonderful video as usual, @SabineHossenfelder!
    Curious why the first mentioned approach of "add fire" never was brought up after as an available technology, ICE with hydrogen does work after all! While the early attempts at high pressure, high temperature hydrogen ICE was seen as a dead end, that new JCB engine proves that low pressure, low temperatue hydrogen ICE is very effective, especially for those heavy machines like excavators or trains where batteries have yet to catch up.
    Also, a recent paper on "direct air electrolysis" for green hydrogen went out of its way to test with non-platinum catalysts like nickel and even under wind power (Hydrogen production from the Air, Guo et al, Nature Comm. '22). So, I don't feel like the viability of platinum and iridium as high-efficiency catalysts is a knock against hydrogen, as alternatives have a long history and new ones continue to develop, such as iron or hafnium based PEMFC anodes & cathodes, which experimentally seems to show the same durability as platinum (Nitrogen-plasma treated hafnium oxyhydroxide as an efficient acid-stable electrocatalyst for hydrogen evolution and oxidation reactions, Yang et al. Nature Comm. '19).
    Not sure whether you've had a chance to see developments like this yet, or just had to cut them from the video for pacing reasons!
    On a separate note, knowing the above research and development, saying "the entire hydrogen economy hinges on the availability of [platinum and iridium]" and that "this situation isn't going to change" feels like a gross exaggeration. Clearly, alternative catalysts are available, even today, and the question simply is whether people within the hydrogen economy will select those for their abundancy and lower costs (monetary and ecological) in spite of potentially lower efficiency and less-established supply chains. So that fact that businesses (already well known for kicking the can down the road, hence the climate crisis) have yet to switch to ecological alternatives hardly seems a reason to spell doom and gloom for the hydrogen economy before it's "barely begun".
    To the overall theme, there has been no obvious panacea for energy production and storage, so it feels like the framing of the video over-emphasised hydrogen as a "silver bullet", rather than the grounded framing that it can be one tool among many in the toolbox to a sustainable future, and like all tools has applications where it performs well, and others where it does not. Similarly, the framing on hydrogen cars is something that struck me as odd, because it assumes cars should be central part of a sustainable future, without questioning their utility and impact. The same problem exists with discussion of electric cars, where there exists this same assumption, rather than embracing the opportunity to reconsider the fundamentals, the same as how we need to reconsider the obsession with everything relying on a singular fuel source (petrol/gasoline) instead of an ensemble of power and storage approaches; batteries have shown viability with smaller vehicles, while hydrogen (ICE and PEMFC) has shown it for larger vehicles. So, it really does seem to come back to the unrealistic desire for a panacea, because whenever has nature suggested there should ever be such a thing in any domain?

    • @nightwind_ow
      @nightwind_ow Před rokem +3

      Thanks for this detailed addition! Very interesting read, and also good point about different solutions for different situations. :) I guess the "single best solution" expectation is driven by marketing that want to over-hype their own solution, but also because people often prefer to see a single silver-bullet done by big corporations so they don't have to change their own behavior with respect to their climate impact.

    • @wolfgangpreier9160
      @wolfgangpreier9160 Před rokem +1

      Yamaha even made a new hydrogen powered engine. Specially for Toyota! They want to make a new race series with it. Its funny what ideas people have before admitting its all nonsense and only for their personal satisfaction. Why not take up a hobby like knitting? Costs less energy.

    • @BuellersBack
      @BuellersBack Před rokem

      Nuclear fusion has the potential of becoming a panacea for the energy crisis.

    • @rogerphelps9939
      @rogerphelps9939 Před rokem

      Any sort of internal combustion wngine will be inefficient. Since an ICE is a heat engine, lower temperature operation is likely to result in lower efficiency.

    • @bikeaddictbp
      @bikeaddictbp Před rokem

      The thermal efficiency of an internal combustion engine operating on hydrogen will be no better than one operating on petrol, and with the hydrogen taking up 6 times as much volume plus the restrictions on shape and size of a pressure vessel containing 700 bar of pressure mean the fuel tanks would take up most of the space inside the vehicle to get the range that people expect from vehicles today. And, NOx remains an issue, because with air containing both oxygen and nitrogen and the combustion process raising the temperature high enough to produce NOx, it will still be produced. Battery-electric for private vehicles is the way to go. There are applications that we don't know how to solve ... long-haul aviation, for one. Rome wasn't built in a day.

  • @mattsheard2708
    @mattsheard2708 Před 5 měsíci

    Great video. It seems that all the techno fixes for the GHG emissions crisis just aren't as good as wind and solar despite the intermittency problem. We need research to focus on electricity or other forms of energy storage, which don't require rare materials in the storage methods, but we can't let that get in the way of the energy transition.

  • @JuniorMesquita
    @JuniorMesquita Před 7 měsíci

    Thank you so much for your explanation and expertise!

  • @neilgerace355
    @neilgerace355 Před rokem +5

    13:20 Because you were just talking about Australia: if you leave beer in your car in winter here, it'll usually still be too warm to drink.

    • @stapleman007
      @stapleman007 Před rokem

      But do your beer cans explode when left in the car?

    • @neilgerace355
      @neilgerace355 Před rokem

      @@stapleman007 Maybe in summer

  • @davidbrisbane7206
    @davidbrisbane7206 Před rokem +12

    Dilithium crystals are more likely to power cars than hydrogen 😀.

  • @lx4118
    @lx4118 Před 3 měsíci +1

    What happened with solid hydrogen compounds they showed on TV about 10 years ago ? Instead of storing it under pressure, can it be stored solid and be released by heating those chemicals compounds containing mostly hydrogen ?

  • @jenswinther8601
    @jenswinther8601 Před 7 měsíci

    In Denmark, sole Hydrogen fueling station provider EverFuel, has just announced that it will close the 3 remaining Fueling stations. There are 19 (nine-teen) privately owned hydrogen cars in Denmark and about 150 Taxi'es. R.I.P

  • @lenin972
    @lenin972 Před rokem +42

    My two young sisters are working on solutions to the two major problems you raised in the video. One is developing a more efficient process of extracting hydrogen from water (I'm not sure I'm allowed to share the numbers because it's a private company but they are pretty good). The other just started researching (in the Technion in Haifa) looking for ways to decrease the amount of platinum needed in fuel cells.
    They're tweens and I love this kind of cooperation between them (though we all have our doubts about the practicality of Hydrogen as a fuel, especially for private cars)

    • @janami-dharmam
      @janami-dharmam Před rokem +1

      for car I think methanol is a good candidate for fuel: methanol- fuel cell- electric motor

    • @wolfgangpreier9160
      @wolfgangpreier9160 Před rokem +10

      Even if you could extract hydrogen from anything without cost and repercussions it would still not be a viable alternative to using solar power directly. We need hydrogen for producing fertilizer and some industrial processes like steel reduction. Billions of tons every year for sure. But nowhere else.

    • @jjoshua69
      @jjoshua69 Před rokem

      czcams.com/video/KhtWiK9A4ww/video.html

    • @0011peace
      @0011peace Před rokem

      @@janami-dharmam tht produce more potant green house gas than fossile fues methane.

    • @0011peace
      @0011peace Před rokem +2

      @@wolfgangpreier9160 not really solar power doesn't for Cars. Nuclear ios the only viab;e power sources currently

  • @pjelbro3492
    @pjelbro3492 Před rokem +6

    Thank you. I didn't know Iridium was going to be another problem as well. Hydrogen power didn't need another show stopper. It's got enough already.

  • @cccharlie1972
    @cccharlie1972 Před 8 měsíci

    50% efficient (sulfur iodine process) nuclear hydrogen production X 60% efficient fuel cell at point of use = 30% overall efficiency. Or 35% efficient nuke electricity plant. Nearly a wash. (differences in pipeline vs electricity distribution and compression vs charging efficiency are close to a wash as well)
    Hydrogen's advantage is that the pipelines themselves store and release energy by varying pressure throughout the day. No need for grid scale batteries or peak plants. Currently, the US installed capacity, if run 24/7 would produce over 2.5 X total annual demand. So, we would need half as many plants if we ran hydrogen production 24/7 vs constantly turning on and off electricity production in a never ending struggle to match production to demand.
    Plastic pipe is cheap and reliable - copper wires, transformers, and obscenely large battery installations are expensive junk.
    Unfortunately, final demolition of our expensive, unreliable, complicated, and very ugly electrical grid is many decades away. But we will see this implemented successfully elsewhere first. And we will gradually watch our natural gas distribution pipelines get upgraded or replaced to handle hydrogen distribution.