The system solves all of the
obstacles associated with the manufacturing, transporting and
storing of hydrogen to be used in cars. When it becomes
commercial in a few years time, the system will be incorporated
into cars that will cost about the same as existing conventional
cars to run, and will be completely emission free.
As President Bush urges Americans to cut back on the use of oil
in wake of the recent surge in prices, more and more people are
looking for more viable alternatives to the use of petroleum as
the main fuel for the automotive industry. IsraCast recently
covered the idea developed at the Weizmann Institute to use pure
Zinc to produce Hydrogen using solar power. Now, a different
solution has been developed by an Israeli company called
Engineuity. Amnon Yogev, one of the two founders of Engineuity,
and a retired Professor of the Weizmann Institute, suggested a
method for producing a continuous flow of Hydrogen and steam
under full pressure inside a car. This method could also be used
for producing hydrogen for fuel cells and other applications
requiring hydrogen and/or steam.
The Hydrogen car Engineuity is working on will use metals such
as Magnesium or Aluminum which will come in the form of a long
coil. The gas tank in conventional vehicles will be replaced by
a device called a Metal-Steam combustor that will separate
Hydrogen out of heated water. The basic idea behind the
technology is relatively simple: the tip of the metal coil is
inserted into the Metal-Steam combustor together with water
where it will be heated to very high temperatures. The metal
atoms will bond to the Oxygen from the water, creating metal
oxide. As a result, the Hydrogen molecules are free, and will be
sent into the engine alongside the steam.
The solid waste product of the process, in the form of metal
oxide, will later be collected in the fuel station and recycled
for further use by the metal industry.
Refuelling the car based on this technology will also be
remarkably simple. The vehicle will contain a mechanism for
rolling the metal wire into a coil during the process of
fuelling and the spent metal oxide, which was produced in the
previous phase, will be collected from the car by vacuum
suction.
Beside the obvious advantages of the system, such as the
inexpensive and abundant fuel, the production of Hydrogen
on-the-go and the zero emission engine, the system is also more
efficient than other Hydrogen solutions. The main reason for
this is the improved usage of heat (steam) inside the system
that brings that overall performance level of the vehicle to
that of a conventional car. In an interview, Professor Yogev
told IsraCast that a car based on Engineuity's system will be
able to travel about the same distance between refueling as an
equivalent conventional car. The only minor drawback, which also
limits the choice of possible metal fuel sources, is the weight
of the coil. In order for the Hydrogen car to be able to travel
as far as a conventional car it needs a metal coil three-times
heavier than an equivalent petrol tank. Although this sound like
a lot in most cars this will add up to about 100kg (220 pounds)
and should not affect the performance of the car.
Engineuity is currently in the advanced stages of the incubator
program of the Chief Scientist in Israel, and is seeking
investors that will allow it to develop a full scale prototype.
Given the proper investment the company should be able to
develop the prototype in about three years. The move to Hydrogen
based cars using Engineuity's technology will require only
relatively minor changes from the car manufacturer's point of
view. Since the modified engine can be produced using existing
production lines, removing the need for investment in new
infrastructures (the cost of which is estimated at billions of
dollars), the new Hydrogen cars would not be more expensive.
Although Engineuity's Hydrogen car will not be very different
from existing conventional cars, the company is not currently
planning an upgrade kit for existing cars but is concentrating
on building a system that will be incorporated into new car
models.
Possibly the most appealing aspect of the system is the running
cost. According to Yogev, the overall running cost of the system
should be equal to that of conventional cars today. Given the
expected surge in oil prices in the near future Engineuity's
Hydrogen car could not come too soon.
Iddo
Genuth - IsraCast
Engineuity website