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Hydrogen, the Dream Fuel, Shifts From Cars to Houses

By Chris Morrison | Sep 29, 2009

Hydrogen has certainly taken its lumps in the ongoing debate over renewable energy. When President Bush provided a budget for research into using hydrogen in cars, he also kicked off a support movement that agitated continually in favor of hydrogen — although many of its members appeared to not be aware that it had to be made from natural gas, at a significant net energy loss.

The movement died down over time, helped along by an attempt from new Department of Energy head Steven Chu to kill hydrogen funding. Now, aside from a few lingering efforts by major car companies to draw attention to hydrogen fuel cells, it’s rare to hear much about it. But wait — enter the hydrogen-powered house:

Similar experiments are being done elsewhere, but what sets Florida State’s effort apart from most is the building’s reliance on hydrogen for power at night and on cloudy or rainy days.

Hydrogen is a potential low-cost alternative to batteries because storage tanks for the lighter-than-air gas are comparatively simple and cheap.

“It’s a viable concept that they are demonstrating,” said Yogi Goswami, co-director of the Clean Energy Research Center at the University of South Florida. “For hydrogen the problem is the cost of production. It’s usually high. If they are going to reduce that cost, that’s moving in the right direction.”

Attentive readers will remember something along these lines coming up last year. That was a project by MIT professor Daniel Nocera, who announced that his research into splitting hydrogen from water had found a cheaper catalyst, made from a cobalt phosphate.

And as it turns out, Nocera, also, is ramping up his efforts in this area. MIT spun off a company called Sun Catalytix, which is working on a plan very similar to the one above. Solar panels on a home’s roof would generate excess energy during the day, which would be converted to hydrogen and stored for later use.

Chances are good that if two universities have projects going in this area, there are others doing the same. But what are their prospects in the real world?

For an off-grid house, the verdict looks pretty good. People choosing to live off-grid will typically take the best option available, if they can afford it at all. That may well be solar power with hydrogen storage; with that setup, a home could be continuously powered as if it were connected to a remote power plant.

The prognosis doesn’t look as good for homes that are already connected. All the equipment to create and store hydrogen will be expensive by itself, but as the article on the FSU project notes, the amount of solar paneling required also drastically increases — in this case, to 6.9 kilowatts, which is three or more times larger than the average solar installation.

The problem is that solar only peaks for a few hours a day, and during that peak, the conversion to hydrogen won’t even approach perfect efficiency; a good portion of the energy will be lost, so much more solar paneling is needed than the amount required to power the home for a few hours. For reference, by the way, the solar paneling alone could cost well over $100,000 (without subsidies) if installed today.

Despite various technical hurdles, it’s really the high costs that have inhibited vehicular hydrogen; it’s too early to tell, but it looks like that will also be the case here. Still, those considerations aren’t likely to stop the research, so we’ll probably be hearing much more about hydrogen-powered homes in the future.

Chris Morrison, a reporter on energy, renewables and climate change, is the former lead cleantech writer for VentureBeat. Follow him on Twitter.

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  •  
    1

    LizbethC

    09/29/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Hydrogen, the Dream Fuel, Shifts From Cars to Houses

    Fuel cells and hydrogen are certainly one important part of the energy future. I've read that most of the cell phone providers are moving to FCs to provide back-up power to transmission towers.

    The energy in-energy out equation certainly must be addressed, although it's important to point out that making H2 from natural gas is more efficient than burning it to make electricity. It certainly uses more solar electricity to make H2 than to run the lights, but if the house is sitting empty during the day, why not use that excess electricity and use the H2 in the evening when energy demand exceeds what the panels supply?

  •  
    2

    gregblencoe

    09/29/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Hydrogen, the Dream Fuel, Shifts From Cars to Houses

    The truth is that hydrogen fuel cell vehicles are going strong.

    http://hydrogendiscoveries.wordpress.com/2009/08/17/7-
    reasons-to-love-toyota-hydrogen-fuel-cell-vehicles/

    From the link above, which also includes a must-see YouTube
    video...

    Here are 7 reasons to love Toyota hydrogen fuel cell vehicles
    (which the company started developing in-house back in 1992
    when I was a senior in high school):

    1. 431-mile real-world driving range with Toyota FCHV-adv
    (mid-size SUV) hydrogen fuel cell vehicle (See YouTube video
    below)

    2. 68.3 real-world miles per kilogram fuel economy with Toyota
    FCHV-adv (See YouTube video below)

    3. Ability to operate in temperatures as low as minus 22
    degrees Fahrenheit (minus 30 degrees Celsius)

    4. Irv Miller, TMS group vice president, environmental and
    public affairs, made the following comment on August 6th:

    ?In 2015, our plan is to bring to market a reliable and durable
    fuel cell vehicle with exceptional fuel economy and zero
    emissions, at an affordable price.?

    5. Masatami Takimoto, a Toyota executive vice president and
    board member, made the following comment in January at the
    North American International Auto Show:

    ?By 2015, we will have a full-fledged commercialization effort.?

    6. The Toyota FCHV-adv (Highlander) hydrogen fuel cell
    vehicle has the same trunk and passenger space as the
    gasoline-powered version.

    Click on the following link to see a picture of the trunk in the
    Toyota FCHV-adv hydrogen fuel cell vehicle.

    7. Here is a comment made by Justin Ward, advanced
    powertrain program manager-Toyota Technical Center, in a
    Ward?s Automotive article (subscription required) that was
    published on July 16th:

    ?We have some confidence the vehicle released around 2015 is
    going to have costs that are going to be shocking for most of
    the people in the industry. They are going to be very surprised
    we were able to achieve such an impressive cost reduction.?

    Greg Blencoe
    Chief Executive Officer
    Hydrogen Discoveries, Inc.
    "Hydrogen Car Revolution" blog

  •  
    3

    conlad

    10/01/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Hydrogen, the Dream Fuel, Shifts From Cars to Houses

    More and more, I'm looking at a convergence in the future. How so? Solar, Wind and other sources provide good energy but not on demand. Batteries are costly and their life span can be short. Thus, for high energy needs, and specially the on demand kind (think some kind of process), the hydrogen could very well be the solution.

    Thus, wind and solar provide electricity for cities and cars (via plug-in). This is a rather stable demand that can be well provided. Hydrogen in turn gets used for more energy-heavy processes and uses (and you use wind and solar excesses to create hydrogen).

    So, in the future, we will see both and hopefully in complimentary way.

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