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- Xref: sparky rec.autos.tech:12390 sci.environment:11193 sci.chem:3455
- Path: sparky!uunet!stanford.edu!rutgers!rochester!dietz
- From: dietz@cs.rochester.edu (Paul Dietz)
- Newsgroups: rec.autos.tech,sci.environment,sci.chem
- Subject: Re: Hydrides
- Message-ID: <1992Sep9.152854.21731@cs.rochester.edu>
- Date: 9 Sep 92 15:28:54 GMT
- References: <1992Sep9.082509.4474@bb1t.monsanto.com>
- Organization: Computer Science Department University of Rochester
- Lines: 73
-
- In article <1992Sep9.082509.4474@bb1t.monsanto.com> bjgaed@bb1t.monsanto.com writes:
-
- > The "hydrides" you are speaking of are *transition metal*
- ...
- > I don't remember the exact numbers, but the metal sponges
- > can hold a surprising amount of hydrogen, more than their
- > own weight, I believe.
-
- No way. With transition metal hydrides, the weight
- of hydrogen is only a few percent of the weight of the
- metal.
-
-
- > To burn fossil fuel to make electricity to make hydrogen
- > from water to put into an internal combustion engine is just
- > plain crazy. The generating station may run at 35%
- > efficiency, then a 10% transmission loss, then you throw
- > away the energy that goes into the oxygen when you make
- > hydrogen from water, then you have to compress and transport
- > the hydrogen, then burn it in an engine at about 30%
- > efficiency.
-
- This *is* crazy, because it is more efficient and economical to make
- hydrogen from fossil fuels and water by *chemical* means.
- Specifically, the reaction
-
- C + H2O --> CO + H2
-
- followed by
-
- CO + H2O --> CO2 + H2.
-
- This is, overall, mildly endothermic; the heat input can be supplied
- by burning some of the fossil fuel, or by some other high grade heat
- source (nuclear, say). Similar reactions involving hydrocarbons
- (specifically, methane) are the primary source of industrial hydrogen
- today.
-
- I have no idea what you mean by saying that energy "goes into the
- oxygen". The energy is a property of the combination of the two
- products; it is not allocated some to each.
-
- Finally, hydrogen is not going to make much sense in cars unless used
- in fuel cells. It's just too expensive and low in energy density
- otherwise.
-
-
- > automobile engine. The generating station can achieve much
- > more complete combustion, thus eliminating much of the
- > hydrocarbon and carbon monoxide problem, but the carbon ends
- > up as carbon dioxide no matter what. If it turns out we do
- > have to control carbon dioxide emissions, the best way to do
- > it in this scenario is to burn the fuel *in the car* because
- > you don't have to burn 3-5 times as much to make up for all
- > of those losses and inefficiencies.
-
- No, because if you convert the fossil fuel at a stationary plant, the
- CO2 can be potentially scrubbed out for sequestration, either in
- depleted gas wells or via deep sea disposal.
-
- This is rather difficult to do with cars, but a hybrid system has been
- proposed. The idea is to burn both gasoline and hydrogen, with the
- hydrogen stored as magnesium hydride. Water of combustion is
- circulated back into the hydride, producing additional hydrogen and
- magnesium hydroxide. CO2 from gasoline combustion is scrubbed out
- using the hydroxide, making magnesium carbonate. The carbonate is
- recovered at refueling time and refined back to the hydride, with the
- CO2 removed and sequestered. I doubt this would be, in the end,
- either economical or feasible, but it's at least thought provoking,
- and has much higher energy density than a pure hydride system.
-
- Paul F. Dietz
- dietz@cs.rochester.edu
-