1 / 30

H 2 – Mobility of the future Based on material provided by courtesy of BMW Group AG

H 2 – Mobility of the future Based on material provided by courtesy of BMW Group AG. 2. Mobility – The engine of progress. Mobility – The engine of progress. mobility = an important economic factor reliable infrastructure as a business advantage

sol
Download Presentation

H 2 – Mobility of the future Based on material provided by courtesy of BMW Group AG

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. H2 – Mobility of the futureBased on material provided by courtesy of BMW Group AG 2 1st AREHNA Workshop „Mobility-Environment-Health“, Kos, Greece, 3-5 May 2003

  2. Mobility – The engine of progress 1st AREHNA Workshop „Mobility-Environment-Health“, Kos, Greece, 3-5 May 2003

  3. Mobility – The engine of progress mobility = an important economic factor • reliable infrastructure as a business advantage • mobility is an indicator of wealth and an important factor of globalisation • Challenge: To arrive to sustainable mobility 1st AREHNA Workshop „Mobility-Environment-Health“, Kos, Greece, 3-5 May 2003

  4. Mobility – The engine of progress Disadvantages of mobility • depletion of the world’s crude oil and natural gas reserves • increase in the concentration of carbon dioxide (CO2) in the atmosphere • increase in traffic volume and traffic congestion • health risks for human, animal and plant life through harmful emissions (e.g. sulphur dioxide and nitrogen oxides) 1st AREHNA Workshop „Mobility-Environment-Health“, Kos, Greece, 3-5 May 2003

  5. Mobility – The engine of progress Possible solutions • energy conservation • use of renewable energy (solar energy, hydroelectric power, wind power, biomass) • implementation of hydrogen as an energy source 1st AREHNA Workshop „Mobility-Environment-Health“, Kos, Greece, 3-5 May 2003

  6. Fossil energy sources are finite Reserves are running out • Growth of the world’s population causes energy demand to increase • Lifespan of individual energy sources in years: Source: German Federal Institute for Geosciences and Natural Resources 1st AREHNA Workshop „Mobility-Environment-Health“, Kos, Greece, 3-5 May 2003

  7. Fossil energy sources are finite 1st AREHNA Workshop „Mobility-Environment-Health“, Kos, Greece, 3-5 May 2003

  8. On the move with hydrogen The discovery of hydrogen: • hydrogen = ύδωρ-hydor (water) + γεννώ-gennο (generate) • hydrogen pioneers: Paracelsus, Robert Boyle, Henry Cavendish, Antoine Laurent Lavoisier • Two thirds of the Earth’s atmosphere is made up of H2 • On Earth H2: water (H 66%-O 33%), organic compound (H 48%-O 28%) 1st AREHNA Workshop „Mobility-Environment-Health“, Kos, Greece, 3-5 May 2003

  9. H2 as the energy source of tomorrow A storage medium for heat and electricity: • hydrogen = ideal energy source to bridge the time and distance gaps between supply and demand: energy source  as a component of water, a resource available in large quantities  environmentally compatible as part of the biological life cycle  its oxidation creates pure water  easily transported and stored in compressed gas form or as a supercooled liquid  releases chemically stored energy in the form of heat, or in the form of electricity and heat in fuel cells  high energy content = suitable as fuel for cars energy content fuel for cars 1st AREHNA Workshop „Mobility-Environment-Health“, Kos, Greece, 3-5 May 2003

  10. H2 as the energy source of tomorrow 1st AREHNA Workshop „Mobility-Environment-Health“, Kos, Greece, 3-5 May 2003

  11. H2 as the energy source of tomorrow 1st AREHNA Workshop „Mobility-Environment-Health“, Kos, Greece, 3-5 May 2003

  12. On the way to our energy source of the future 1st AREHNA Workshop „Mobility-Environment-Health“, Kos, Greece, 3-5 May 2003

  13. On the way to our energy source of the future • Advantages of Sustainable Energy:  fossil fuel resources no longer burnt  cyclical system: hydrogen as well as the energy required to generate it are derived from renewable sources  combustion of hydrogen emits no greenhouse gases  local power supply in the home and cars 1st AREHNA Workshop „Mobility-Environment-Health“, Kos, Greece, 3-5 May 2003

  14. On the way to our energy source of the future The next steps • development of a wide-ranging H2 infrastructure • today: extraction of hydrogen from fossil-fuel resources (above all natural gas) – cost-effective but not ecological • aim: hydrogen production using renewable energy sources – production processes more expensive, but without CO2 emissions hydrogen production using renewable energy sources • reduction in costs through series production making the hydrogen economy financially competitive 1st AREHNA Workshop „Mobility-Environment-Health“, Kos, Greece, 3-5 May 2003

  15. On the way to our energy source of the future Cost Of H2 • Depends on the primary source of energy used: • Renewable energy sources: Solar power produced H2 today has a cost of 21 € / KWh • Natural gas (CH4) as a starting point has significant cost advantages (cost of 7 € / KWh) • Possible Solution • During the transition phase: Use of “intelligent mix” of fossil and renewable fuel. 1st AREHNA Workshop „Mobility-Environment-Health“, Kos, Greece, 3-5 May 2003

  16. On the way to our energy source of the future Emissions versus cost of fossil fuels and renewable energy 1st AREHNA Workshop „Mobility-Environment-Health“, Kos, Greece, 3-5 May 2003

  17. Hydrogen in the car • goal: travel as far as cars with petrol engines • thermally insulated tank carrying liquid hydrogen fuelling Ecological fuelling and travelling Properties of the tank • Cryogenic tank variant Cryogenic tank variant  loss-free storage for approx. 12 days thermal insulation through double-shell vacuum-insulated cryogenic tanks with super-insulation  pressure up to max. five bar: -253 to -245° C • Safety guarantee  through crash tests crash tests  different safety-relevant behaviour to petrol 1st AREHNA Workshop „Mobility-Environment-Health“, Kos, Greece, 3-5 May 2003

  18. Hydrogen in the car 1st AREHNA Workshop „Mobility-Environment-Health“, Kos, Greece, 3-5 May 2003

  19. The case of the electric car:How do you store electricity? The problem of storing electricity: • electrical energy can only be used when stored in an intermediate storage medium (e.g. as chemical energy in a battery) • expensive and inefficient additional stage The advantages of electrically powered cars: • quiet • over 90 % efficiency • low emissions 1st AREHNA Workshop „Mobility-Environment-Health“, Kos, Greece, 3-5 May 2003

  20. The case of the electric car:How do you store electricity? The solution: electric cars powered by fuel cells Batteries are not the alternative • cannot achieve the same energy density as petrol and diesel • not endlessly rechargeable • too expensive • too heavy and large • operating range limited to 100-150 kilometres • electricity generated from chemical reaction between hydrogen and oxygen • recharging not necessary due to onboard tank fuel cells 1st AREHNA Workshop „Mobility-Environment-Health“, Kos, Greece, 3-5 May 2003

  21. The fuel cell – electricity from hydrogen 1st AREHNA Workshop „Mobility-Environment-Health“, Kos, Greece, 3-5 May 2003

  22. The fuel cell – electricity from hydrogen Advantages of fuel cells • eco-friendly and efficient • operation with pure hydrogen: low emissions • conversion of chemical energy directly into electrical energy (conversion of more than 1/2 of the energy input into electricity) • much higher efficiency than conventional power plants (no detour via turbine and generator which results to 2/3 of energy loss ) • Reaction between H2 and O2 without flame: "Cold Combustion" operation with pure hydrogen 1st AREHNA Workshop „Mobility-Environment-Health“, Kos, Greece, 3-5 May 2003

  23. Fuel cells in use • The Fuel for Fuel Cells • Fuel Cells can run on • On pure H2 • On a number of H compounds: • Natural gas (CH4) CH4+H2O  CO+3H2 CO+O2 CO2 • Methanol • Biomass • Petrol 1st AREHNA Workshop „Mobility-Environment-Health“, Kos, Greece, 3-5 May 2003

  24. Fuel cells in use 1st AREHNA Workshop „Mobility-Environment-Health“, Kos, Greece, 3-5 May 2003

  25. A new way of thinking – starting today 1st AREHNA Workshop „Mobility-Environment-Health“, Kos, Greece, 3-5 May 2003

  26. A new way of thinking – starting today Hydrogen represents the mobility of the future • the CleanEnergy approach adopted by the BMW Group: to build hydrogen-powered cars with internal combustion engines BMW Group hydrogen-powered cars with internal combustion engines • alternative concepts proposed by DaimlerChrysler and Opel: electric cars powered by fuel cells DaimlerChrysler • hydrogen extracted from renewable energy sources is in some respects cheaper in view of the ecological “cost” of burning fossil fuels hydrogen extracted from renewable energy sources • important: public information about the advantages of the hydrogen economy 1st AREHNA Workshop „Mobility-Environment-Health“, Kos, Greece, 3-5 May 2003

  27. A new way of thinking – starting today 1st AREHNA Workshop „Mobility-Environment-Health“, Kos, Greece, 3-5 May 2003

  28. A new way of thinking – starting today 1st AREHNA Workshop „Mobility-Environment-Health“, Kos, Greece, 3-5 May 2003

  29. A new way of thinking - starting today 1st AREHNA Workshop „Mobility-Environment-Health“, Kos, Greece, 3-5 May 2003

  30. H2 – Mobility of the future 1st AREHNA Workshop „Mobility-Environment-Health“, Kos, Greece, 3-5 May 2003

More Related