|
Hydrogen Fuel Cells May Help U. S. Military Cut
Gas Usage
Blackanthem
Military News, WASHINGTON, D.C., March 25, 2006 10:13
|
 |
|
Bill Haris (passenger
seat), an engineer with the U. S. Army National Automotive Center,
explains the features of the Army's modified Chevrolet Silverado truck
during a ride-and-drive event at Golden Gate Field in Berkeley, Calif.
, Sept. 29, 2005. The public was invited to test drive the
hydrogen-fuel-cell vehicle at several locations along the route. Army
photo |
Emerging automotive technology
may eventually assist Americans -- and their military -- in reducing their
dependence on hydrocarbon-based fuels for transportation needs.
Government agencies such as the Defense and Energy departments are working
to adapt new technologies like hydrogen-fuel-cell-powered vehicles that
conserve finite, pollution-producing and increasingly expensive fossil
fuels.
The Army has been testing a prototype hydrogen-fuel-cell system installed
within a conventional truck platform for about a year now, said Bill Haris,
a mechanical engineer at the Army's National Automotive Center. The NAC is
part of the U. S. Army's Tank Automotive Research Development and
Engineering Center at Warren, Mich. The application is geared toward
nontactical vehicle usage.
A hydrogen fuel cell is a device that produces electricity, water and hot
air, Haris said. Hydrogen coming into the fuel cell, he said, is
chemically converted into electricity and steam.
"There is zero pollution," Haris said.
The one-of-a-kind prototype is based on a Chevrolet Silverado, Haris said.
The truck's original engine, transmission and gas tank were removed and
replaced with two hydrogen fuel cells and two electric motors - one motor
drives the front wheels and the other drives the rear wheels.
And "the plumbing and the storage tanks for the hydrogen, as well as the
brains to control all the energy flow" are installed, Haris said.
In comparison, a hybrid vehicle uses two types of energy sources to
provide motive power, Haris explained. One type of hybrid vehicle now
being sold has an electric motor, a large battery used to operate the
motor, and a small gasoline engine, he said.
At slower speeds the hybrid's electric motor moves the vehicle, Haris
said, while the gasoline engine is employed during faster highway travel
or to provide more acceleration. Hybrids are designed to provide better
fuel mileage and less pollution than a conventional gasoline-powered
internal-combustion-engine vehicle.
"So a hybrid is an extension of what you've already got. It's taking what
you have and adding things to it to try and give it a little bit more
capability," Haris explained. By comparison, a fuel-cell vehicle "is
essentially a battery-driven vehicle," he said.
Hydrogen fuel-cell vehicles employ "a totally different technology than
what you'd find under a conventional hood," Haris said. When viewing the
motive system of a hydrogen fuel cell vehicle "people just don't know what
they're looking at," he said. "It's all very foreign. "
A conventional gasoline-powered automobile will achieve around 30 percent
energy efficiency, Haris said, while a fuel-cell unit will post about 50
percent efficiency.
"That's where you gain your fuel efficiency," Haris said, adding that no
hydrocarbon-based fuels, like gasoline or diesel, are used to power the
Army's prototype hydrogen-fuel-cell vehicle.
Hydrogen fuel is available in both liquid and compressed gas form, Haris
said. The industry, he said, is currently favoring compressed hydrogen gas
for fuel-cell-powered vehicle application.
The Army's developmental hydrogen fuel-cell truck is capable of reaching
speeds of 95 mph, Haris said. But its current range of 125 miles per
fill-up is only about half of hydrocarbon-fueled vehicles, he said.
"That's one of the areas that really need to make a huge step forward,"
Haris acknowledged. On method under study to solve the distance issue is
employing some type of solid-hydrogen storage system.
"We recognize it is a limitation and recognize that the industry is
working really hard to address it," Haris said.
The hydrogen truck came on line last spring, Haris said. "It's an
interservice program with the military," he said. The Marines also have
interest in the project.
Leveraging commercial research on hydrogen fuel cells dovetails with DoD's
desire to harness private-industry expertise, said Harold Sanborn, an
expert on alternative fuel sources who also works at NAC.
"We need to look at commercial technologies and find out if they are ready
for military applications," Sanborn said.
The hydrogen-fuel-cell-truck concept also "is a good starting point for
discussion about modernizing our bases and the base infrastructure to make
our bases more efficient and cleaner overall," Sanborn said.
Right now, fuel cells are from five to 10 times more expensive than
internal-combustion-engine-driven systems, Sanborn said. He also
acknowledged that using compressed hydrogen, a highly flammable element,
does present unique safety and storage concerns. However, those concerns
are being addressed with success, Sanborn said.
Some day military bases may replace their internal-combustion-engine truck
fleets with fuel cell or fuel cell/ hybrid vehicles, Sanborn said.
"Then they could use clean-burning hydrogen in that application and drive
those vehicles in their duty cycles," he said.
By Gerry J. Gilmore
American Forces Press Service
|