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09-07-08, 02:38 PM | #1 |
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Hydrogen conversion and its waste
Now, its been a few years since I did science and there has been a lot of hype lately about hydrogen conversions for cars. Now to me this does seem to offer a few problems that seem to not get mentioned or over looked in the hype.
1. To create hydrogen you need electricty, adding another element to the process when you could just get the power direct from electricity, so overall is it more efficient? 2. Depending on where you get your electric from its orginal source may not be that green, as we get alot of our power from coal power stations. While nucular is not looked at in a good way, it is far greener. 3. Waste, hydrogen conversion produces oxygen as its waste, which is not a bad thing though oxygen on its own is not good for you. Could we end up producing to much? 4. If your turning water to hydrogen and oxygen, then are you not at some point going to be using alot of water so even that one day would run out, a long time off I know, but still something that would happen. 5. Burning hydrogen as a fuel would produce waste but what is that waste, after all there is always a by product from the engery coversion as a fuel, though I can't remember what. So can anyone enlighten me, or will I need to find some time tonight to perform to 'key' research. |
09-07-08, 02:44 PM | #2 |
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Re: Hydrogen conversion and its waste
5. Waste product is, I believe water. Hydrogen reacts with oxygen in the air and you get H20? Summit like that?
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09-07-08, 02:48 PM | #3 |
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Re: Hydrogen conversion and its waste
2. I guess it's far easier to "green up" the 100 or so power stations than doing the same to twenty million cars. Although I vaguely remember (perhaps incorrectly) that the modern internal combustion engine is actually more efficient (in that stored chemical energy gets transferred into motion) than most power stations.
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09-07-08, 02:49 PM | #4 | |
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Re: Hydrogen conversion and its waste
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09-07-08, 02:51 PM | #5 | ||
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Re: Hydrogen conversion and its waste
Quote:
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Burn hydrogen, get energy, then it gives more water... You sure??? The must be some loss somewhere? |
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09-07-08, 02:51 PM | #6 |
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Re: Hydrogen conversion and its waste
4. Conservation of energy means that energy can't ever be lost, only transferred. Energy and matter are tied. If the earth is a closed system (which it isn't but I guess for the purposes of cosmic timescales it's as good as) then in theory we still have the same amount of matter on the planet and thanks to a constant fresh supply of energy (light from the sun) we should have the means to never run out of matter or energy.
Summit like that |
09-07-08, 02:53 PM | #7 |
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Re: Hydrogen conversion and its waste
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09-07-08, 02:55 PM | #8 | |
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Re: Hydrogen conversion and its waste
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2) Due to that inefficiency, it only make sense if you have a lot of electricity to waste - so loads of nuclear power plants would be good - think of it as a way to make your car/bike nuclear powered. If nuclear fusion comes along, it will make electricity ultra-cheap and so the inefficiency wont matter. 3, 4 and 5 together) If splitting hydrogen rather than using naturally occuring you get a pretty good "circle of life" Starting with water and adding electricity gives you hydrogen, burning hydrogen gives you the means to generate power and water, which then gives you the water back. Its actually VERY hard to destroy matter, it just tends to get converted to something (even if that is as intangible as light in the form of photons.)
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09-07-08, 02:57 PM | #9 |
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Re: Hydrogen conversion and its waste
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09-07-08, 02:57 PM | #10 |
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Re: Hydrogen conversion and its waste
A bigger problem from it all is that a Hydrogen cell is in real terms relatively unstable.....it would have to be very well protected in a car incase there was an accident.
An then there another bigger problem terrorists will just love hydrogen cars......anyone every seen a hydrogen fuel cell being blown up (check out youtube).....wouldnt be to hard to rig a car up to explode.
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