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Truckers Choose Hydrogen Power

hipernoico writes to tell us Wired News is reporting that hundreds of semi trucks now on the roads are being partially powered by hydrogen. From the article: "These 18-wheelers make hydrogen as they go, eliminating the need for high-pressure, cryogenic storage tanks or hydrogen filling stations, which, by the way, don't yet exist. These truckers aren't just do-gooders. They like Canadian Hydrogen Energy's Hydrogen Fuel Injection, or HFI, system because it lets them save fuel, get more horsepower and, as a bonus, cause less pollution."

32 of 511 comments (clear)

  1. Additional supplement to the hydrogen? by nizo · · Score: 4, Funny

    Perhaps we should investigate additionally using methane as a source of fuel for these trucks. Not only could we keep these guys in business, but in some cases (such as trucks that haul cattle) they might actually produce more energy than they burn.

    1. Re:Additional supplement to the hydrogen? by Luckster7 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Actually, Methanol/Water Injection on Diesel engines is like NOS on a gasser. The Methanol does make the diesel burn cleaner like the hydrogen in this article, and the water cools the EGTs (Exhaust Gas Temp) enough to keep everything from melting down. Virtually all race cars run on Methanol too.

      --
      Deuteronomy 13:06-9
    2. Re:Additional supplement to the hydrogen? by DrSkwid · · Score: 4, Informative

      > Virtually all race cars run on Methanol too.

      For "virtually all" read "Indy Cars"

      F1 cars run on unleaded petrol.
      Nascars run on 110 Octane gasolene
        etc. etc.

      --
      There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter
  2. What?? by rscoggin · · Score: 5, Funny

    That doesn't fit the rugged stereotypical trucker at all! "Goshdernit, we're gonna pollute all we need to get this convoy to San Antonio by Saturday!"

    1. Re:What?? by BobPaul · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Wha? I always thought the stereotypical trucker was pissed about how much gas prices were cutting into their income (or the corporation was if the trucker didn't own his rig).

      In either case the diesel is cutting into someones proffits and someone is eager to cut costs. Maybe the ends isn't a decrease in pollution, but it's a natural by product in using less fuel, which is a major goal for any semi-truck owner.

    2. Re:What?? by identity0 · · Score: 4, Funny

      Yeah, no kidding! What next, an ethanol-powered General Lee?! 'Course, if they used moonshine, it'd be alright...

      But how can I take Smokey & The Bandit seriously if Burt Reynolds has to stop every now and then and go, "Gosh darn it, the H2/Oxygen ratio is all gummed up, I gotta recalibrate the electrolysis diffuser and recompile the firmware matrix!"(kicks tires). They're turning my redneck flicks into Star Trek! Nooooooo!!

  3. Re:Hydrogen Wells? by Skyfire · · Score: 5, Informative

    The trucks aren't using hydrogen as their main source of fuel. They are using hydrogen to enhance the combustion of the diesel.

    --
    Do not go gentle into that good night. Rage, rage against the dying of the light.
  4. Maybe a problem by suso · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They like Canadian Hydrogen Energy's Hydrogen Fuel Injection, or HFI, system because it lets them save fuel, get more horsepower and, as a bonus, cause less pollution."

    Could our root problem be that we consider less pollution a bonus instead of a motivating factor?

    1. Re:Maybe a problem by Sarisar · · Score: 5, Insightful

      As always money first, pollution second.

      Although IMHO this is the only way to actually make people stop polluting - make it cheaper for them not to. Of course I'm sure the power that be would just tax polluters as they can make a LOAD of cash that way (oh wait...)

  5. Awsome by JoeShmoe950 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The faster and farther we get away from oil the better IMHO. I think the bonus should be the extra MPG, and the environmental impact should be the reason. We can spare a few $$$ for environmentally friendlier vehicles. I guess the real problem is, if the government does not intervene, companies will only do what will profit them, and if it does, we end up with violations of rights. Will we ever make the switch in consumer end vehicles in the long run?

  6. Re:What, is the Hydrogen a catalyst? by nizo · · Score: 4, Informative

    This pdf file might be helpful (or search for it on google to see the html version).

  7. Not Alone by Altec+at+LM · · Score: 5, Informative

    This is not the first marketable apparatus using this technology. H2N-Gen has their very own unit that will cost about 4 grand, will fit under your car's hood, and will be on the market by March. There's been several articles on this (and a recent one in Popular Science, December issue). Here's one http://www.engadget.com/entry/1234000373059415/

  8. Re:Hydrogen Wells? by pin_gween · · Score: 4, Informative

    I assume that their hydrogen source is probably mostly produced from electricity from coal burning plants.

    Umm, No...read your own quote: Electricity (from the alternator in the engine) is used to split the water into hydrogen and oxygen.

    The fact that water weighs in at over 8lbs is fairly moot -- gasoline weighs in closely, so adding a tank that holds a few gallons of water is not a major addition to trucking weight. Additionally, FEWER emissions. All in all, a good idea, if it is all that it's cracked up to be.

    --
    Ignorance is not a crime; neither should it be a way of life

    Congress control $ = inmates run the asylum
  9. Re:Hydrogen Wells? by radicalnerd · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Are we talking about perpetual motion?
    No, the trucks still run mainly on diesel augmented with hydrogen.

    ...this fuel source may not be exactly the "less" polluting alternative as one may think.
    It's less polluting because the hydrogen boosts the performance of the engine over burning diesel alone, lowers particulates, and all that good stuff. So it does pollute less, by burning the fuel more efficiently.

  10. Re:What, is the Hydrogen a catalyst? by David+Frankenstein · · Score: 4, Informative

    quote...

    Through electrolysis, the Hydrogen Fuel Injection (HFI) kit generates hydrogen and oxygen, which are injected directly into the intake manifold. Published data show that hydrogen burns nearly one order of magnitude faster than petroleum fuels, thus approaching ideal thermodynamic cycle; and hydrogen has a shorter flame quench distance, allowing flames to travel closer to the cold zones, thus improving combustion. These hydrogen properties improve engine performance and emissions.

  11. Not Quite by Comatose51 · · Score: 4, Informative
    "hydrogen filling stations, which, by the way, don't yet exist. "

    Not quite. BMW has been researching and promoting hydrogen cars for some time now. They installed a hydrogen refilling station in Munich in '99(IIRC) and more are on the way, some in the US. The interesting thing about the BMW hydrogen car is that it can burn either hydrogen or gasoline so you can burn hydrogen when its available but not be hampered by the current dearth of hydrogen stations. As for the source of the hydrogen, Electricity generated from solar power is used to split water into hydrogen and oxygen. . The range on the 750H is only 400 km right now. The other trade-off of course is that there is still combustion so it's not as clean as fuel cell cars. Nonetheless, it's a start and not a bad way to transition us into a hydrogen economy.

    --
    EvilCON - Made Famous by /.
  12. Re:Hydrogen Wells? by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 5, Informative

    The trucks are NOT "partially powered by hydrogen" except in a meaningless technical sense. The trucks are generating small amounts of hydrogen that they have generated (somewhat inefficiently) from water and alternator electricity, using energy derived from diesel fuel as usual. They then inject some of that hydrogen back into the engine for a cleaner burn.

    Diesel engines produce soot (dirty filthy polycyclic aromatic compounds) which represents wasted energy and this is merely a way to cut down on the inefficiency represented by the unextracted energy leaving the exhaust. The mechanism by which adding hydrogen to the air-fuel mixture actually accomplishes this involves some complicated physical chemistry beyond the scope of the article- which goes into a misleading nonsequitur about how trucks might use hydrogen-powered fuel cells someday.

  13. Pretty sure it works by Alcimedes · · Score: 5, Insightful

    For all the naysayers, keep in mind, these truckers make their LIVING hauling product long distances. If this didn't work, or made the overall process less effecient, they'd know it. We're talking about their own profits it would be eating into, not some mystery lab result.

    Sorry, but doubt hundreds of truckers are going to do that just to help out a company that involved in "psuedo science".

  14. Re:Does not compute by WolfWithoutAClause · · Score: 4, Informative
    The trick is that the hydrogen is not there to produce energy, but by burning hotter it improves the combustion of the diesel, so the efficiency improvements of the combustion out weigh the losses in the electrolysis system which is driven off the alternator.

    A very clever system, I hope whoever came up with it has a patent on it, I'm not a big fan of IP, but that sounds like a real invention.

    --

    -WolfWithoutAClause

    "Gravity is only a theory, not a fact!"
  15. Did nobody read up on this? by canadianunixbum · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Did nobody read up on this? The hydrogen helps the engine burn more of the fuel that would have been released unused. That is why you use less fuel and have lower emissions.

  16. Boo H2 ...'Termite guts can save the planet' by ScrewTivo · · Score: 4, Interesting

    http://www.physorg.com/news3700.html

    Now that's what I'm talking 'bout

    H2 is BS.

  17. In this house... by headkase · · Score: 4, Funny

    ...they might actually produce more energy than they burn...

    [HOMER]
    In this house, we obey the laws of thermodynamics!
    [/HOMER]
    ;)

    --
    Shh.
  18. They've had such technology for years! by i41Overlord · · Score: 5, Funny

    They made an engine that could run on water but the Big Oil companies bought the patents and hid it in a dark room and behind closed doors, black helicopters, Area51, republicans, Bob Lazar, tin foil hats, mind control beam, yada yada yada.

  19. not hydrogen power! by DaveBarr · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is not hydrogen power. Not even close. All it's doing is generating a small amount of hydrgen to make the diesel combustion more efficient and complete. This is not perpetual motion (taking energy out and putting a greater amount back into the system), it's just a bit of fancy chemistry to make the existing diesel burn better. This has nothing to do with the hydrogen fuel debate.

  20. Re:Hydrogen Wells? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ...considering where the hydrogen is produced, this fuel source may not be exactly the "less" polluting alternative as one may think.

    I am so f sick and tired of gd SUV wanks and oil company astroturfers trotting this one out everytime someone mentions anything that sounds at all like it's going to challenge rotten dinosaur corpses as the fuel of choice.

    RTFA numbnuts! The hydrogen is generated in the engine by the alternator. Despite the vast overhead of this electrolytic separation these guys are still saving 10 grand a year in fuel which easily pays for the simple bolt-on mod within a year or too. The source of the hydrogen is no more polluting than the engine it modifies because it is the engine it modifies.

    Then I notice another equally brilliant mind observing the vast additional burden of 8 lb of water on an 80,000 lb truck. Grab a snatch of a clue as it goes over your head, Sparky. By my calcuations, the entire system, water and all weighs less than the fuel it saves every day.

    For those who can't be bothered to RTFA and aren't completely offended, the system basically adds a small amount of hydrogen to the diesel. The effect is similar (though the mechanism may not be...IANACE) to adding a squirt of acetone to your gas tank.

  21. Re:How does this help? by timeOday · · Score: 4, Interesting
    RTA, the hydrogen helps the diesel combust more completely so you get more energy from each gallon. Some of that is lost in the water->hydrogen conversion, and some is a net savings.

    My question, though, is why not just produce the hydrogen at a plant and enrich the diesel with it at the refinery?

  22. Re:What, is the Hydrogen a catalyst? by RedWizzard · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Fine, but as parent mentioned, as soon as the engine starts powering the electrolysis you'll be below break-even.
    No. You are only thinking in terms of the energy put into the system by burning the hydrogen compared to the energy removed by making the hydrogen. What you are not considering is the energy put into the system by burning the diesel more efficiently. It's a similar sort of prinicple to using a supercharger: just because the supercharger is being powered by the engine doesn't mean you can get a net power gain. In case of a supercharger the extra power is due to increased fuel and air consumption, in this case it is due to increased efficiency combustion of the diesel fuel.
  23. Re:What, is the Hydrogen a catalyst? by Johnny+Mnemonic · · Score: 4, Insightful

    When something sounds too good to be true, always look for what they skate around.

    Or, look for failures of logic and/or math. Using your numbers, and the numbers of a reply to your post: his truck drives 4500 miles a week, and he gets about 7mpg (1200 miles on 175 gallons). 4500/7=640 gallons consumed a week; 2.75/gallon=$1767 in fuel per week.

    Your numbers assumed that this device might allow for a 10% in fuel savings--that'd be $176/week, or x4=$707/month, or very close to what the article estimated the savings were--$700/month. On a $14K device, you'd make it back in 20 months or so-although I also question the consequences of running a (10%?) hotter engine for those kinds of periods ie does it stress the cooling system, or wear the engine components faster?

    The only ones suggesting that there is some magic in the hydrogen didn't RTFA. It was pretty clear to me, at least, that the extra power/fuel savings isn't from the hydrogen burn itself, but that the energy released by that burn allowed otherwise unburned (and therefore uncaptured) exhaust particulate to be consumed.

    When you go to light a fire with a match, you get more energy in return than what it took to produce the match; you burn the kindling. Here we have kindling flowing out the tailpipe because it wasn't ignited--so the hydrogen is just a match. You naysayers are forgetting that ICE aren't 100% efficient already--so this process raises the efficiency of the primary fuel source, which apparently it can do in greater gains than it took to produce the hydrogen in the first place.

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    $tar -xvf .sig.tar
  24. Re:Hydrogen Wells? by Johnny+Mnemonic · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Incomplete combustion occurs because too much fuel is present per mass of air in the cylinder.

    Ever have a campfire? Although you had unlimited air supply, why did you have unburned logs at the conclusion of it? Answer: because the material that didn't burn didn't reach the heat needed to combust. If you took a blowtorch to those remaining logs, you may be able to get another fire going, as the particulate that didn't reach it's combustion point the first time is burned off. With enough unburned logs, you might be able to get more energy back than the blowtorch uses. Same principal here.

    At least in my view this entire system is bunk and the person interviewed must have some financial interest in the promotion of this product.

    Or maybe he just knows what he's talking about, and doesn't draw conclusions from a single faulty premise.

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    $tar -xvf .sig.tar
  25. Hype and hyperbole by gerardrj · · Score: 4, Interesting

    If you go read the manufacturer's web site they don't claim that the introduction of hydrogen itself will increase the fuel efficiency, but that the hydrogen will clean out the carbon deposits in the engine.
    The process will take "from 0 to 9 months" depending on the type of vehicle, amount of build-up, the weather, the speeds driven, the idling time, start/stop driving, etc. Once the engine is cleaned you can see up to "40% increase in fuel efficiency".

    We're talking about some insanely small amounts of hydrogen here.

    The standard kit holds about 4 liters of water and will run for about 12,000KM. If 2/3 of the water is converted to H and captured for use, that means there's 2,261 liters of hydrogen extracted.

    I randomly took a Volvo VE D12 395 engine for specs:
    12.13L displacement and 1500RPM suggested cruise RPM, I'll guess 95Km/h is "cruise".

    12,000KM / 95KM/H = 124.3 hours
    Hydrogen is produced at 18 liters per hour
    124.3 hours * 1500RPM = 11,187,000 revolutions
    11,187,000 revolutions * 12.13L = 135,698,310 Liters of displaced air/fuel mixture

    If my conversions and guesses are close, that means there's .001% hydrogen to air ratio in the cylinders during combustion.

    I say scrap the entire thing. Don't hack in to your electrical system and don't carry around the extra weight of the machine and water. If you want to reduce operating costs, increase fuel efficiency and reduce pollution then BURN BIO-DIESEL!! Bio-Diesel has a net zero effect on atmospheric carbon, is low cost (about $.50us/gal to produce yourself), and is a tremendously powerful solvent that cleans engines of deposits like nobody's business.

    --
    Article X: The powers not delegated... by the Constitution...are reserved...to the people
  26. trucker behavior as idea market indicator by Douglas+Simmons · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Truckers know how more than anyone from being financially pressured to drive fuel-efficiently. For example, next time you're in a traffic jam, watch how trucks wait about five stop-and-go-5-feets the other cars do, and they idle at a constant speed equivilant to that. Hills. Wind tricks. Pee bags.

    My point is that if it's economically ripe, the truckers will be the first to use a new form of energy. If they ain't using it, it ain't ripe (unless it's an amphetamine). Moreover, "If you got it, a truck brought it."

  27. How It Works by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting
    The generated hydrogen and oxygen, when injected into the intake, promote the combustion of diesel fuel. So the thermodynamic efficiency of the engine increases nonlinearly.

    On the downside, the alternator is now constantly loaded, which is an unusual situation and does require additional power.

    Apparently the increase in overall combustion efficiency from the addition of H2 and O2 more than offsets the additional power requirement for the electrolysis. So in the end the engine is more efficient and saves money. Cleaner combustion should also lengthen engine lifespan.

    It should be possible to do the same thing easily with most automobile engines. The only problem I see is ensuring that the alternator is not overloaded, which is primarily a function of the electrolysis electrode size.

    This should also make automobiles easier to start, something useful in wintertime in high-altitude regions such as California where CARB gasoline is a requirement (and is a poor starting fuel).