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Fuel Cells News
October 6, 2005
Hydrogen hybrid car technology
Source: Happy
News
ANAHEIM, Calif.,-- Even as hydrogen fuel cell vehicles gather increasing
attention, it's a less exotic - and these days a surprisingly more mainstream
- auto technology that's set to showcase the near-term viability of hydrogen
fuel.
What are these "everyday" vehicles? They're hydrogen hybrids,
which combine the high fuel economy attributes of today's most popular
gasoline-electric hybrid model with the near-zero emissions of internal
combustion engines running on hydrogen. The result is an extremely clean-running
vehicle that effortlessly uses the same environmentally positive fuel
as hydrogen fuel cell vehicles, but at an exponentially lower cost.
Several examples of this approach are being fielded by Energy Conversion
Devices, Inc., developer of a unique solid storage medium for hydrogen
vehicles. Using metal-hydride technology being commercialized by the company's
Ovonic Hydrogen Systems subsidiary, these hydrogen hybrids carry their
fuel in low-pressure fuel tanks that absorb hydrogen in powdered metal
alloys, and then release gaseous hydrogen on demand to power a hybrid's
internal combustion engine. The same storage technology can be used for
hydrogen fuel cells.
Ovonic Hydrogen Systems' hydrogen hybrids are part of a demonstration
program being launched by the South Coast Air Quality Management District,
the air pollution control agency for four Southern California counties
that have historically faced significant air quality challenges. The technology
is featured in an article running in the Fall 2005 issue of the auto enthusiast
magazine Green Car Journal, as well as on the magazine's companion website,
Green Car Journal Online.
This approach to hydrogen storage is unique in several important ways.
Because a pressurized storage vessel can hold a larger volume of hydrogen
when using metal-hydrides than without them, greater driving range is
provided. Range is one of the key challenges being faced today by fuel
cell vehicles.
Ovonic Hydrogen Systems' method of storing hydrogen in metal-hydrides
at low pressures of under 300 psi is contrary to the trend currently being
set by fuel cell vehicle developers. Present-day fuel cell vehicles typically
offer inadequate driving range because of the limited fuel carried by
their first-generation 5,000 psi hydrogen storage cylinders. Because of
this, automakers are exploring 10,000 psi hydrogen storage as a potential
solution for their fuel cell vehicles. Storing hydrogen in metal form
at low-pressures provides a safer and more practical answer.
Additional information on this innovative hydrogen storage technology,
along with how ECD Ovonics' discoveries in amorphous, disordered, and
related materials are being applied to nickel-metal-hydride batteries,
hydrogen fuel cells, advanced photovoltaics, phase-change optical and
electronic memory, and the Ovonic Threshold Switch, can be found on the
company's website at http://www.ovonic.com.
This release may contain forward-looking statements within the meaning
of the Safe Harbor Provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform
Act of 1995. Such forward-looking statements are based on assumptions
which ECD Ovonics, as of the date of this release, believes to be reasonable
and appropriate. ECD Ovonics cautions, however, that the actual facts
and conditions that may exist in the future could vary materially from
the assumed facts and conditions upon which such forward-looking statements
are based.
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