Product category:
R&D, Test and Evaluation Services
News Release from: Warwick Process Technology | Subject: Hydrogen cars
Edited by the Processingtalk Editorial
Team on 21 February 2003
Plan use natural gas supply to fuel
hydrogen cars
Researchers at the University of Warwick Process Technology Group lead a programme called "Hydrofueler" to connect petrol stations to the normal natural gas supply to fuel hydrogen powered vehicles
Plan to Add Petrol Stations to Natural Gas Supply to Fuel Hydrogen Cars Researchers at the University of Warwick Process Technology Group are leading a programme called "Hydrofueler" to connect petrol stations to the normal natural gas supply to fuel hydrogen powered vehicles The 2.8 million euro EC funded three-year research programme has already drawn interest from Exxon Mobil, and BMW
This article was originally published on Processingtalk on 26 Nov 2004 at 8.00am (UK)
Related stories
Achema experience from valve suppliers in 2003
Achema has increasingly become a key focal point for international business within the global market of chemical processing: experience from UK valve suppliers who exhibited in 2003 is presented
SQC software in the food processing industries
Statistical quality control is a necessary part of food processing: The software chosen to satisfy SQC needs will determine whether SQC is an awkward, intrusive task or a smoothly operating system
One of the problems with using hydrogen powered cars is how to keep their fuel cells supplied with a ready source of hydrogen.
The Warwick researchers believe that much of the necessary infrastructure already exists - the new technology can be fitted to pre-existing filling stations, who will then use it to produce hydrogen from the normal pre-existing natural gas pipeline supply system.
To do this however you need to resolve a number of problems.
Further reading
DADiSP software saves three weeks per brake test
DADiSP, graphic display data processing software is used by Allied Signal/Bendix in collecting test data during the design and manufacture of automotive brake components and brake systems
Castell stops scientists getting stuck in a bunker
Mechanical and electrical interlocks from Castell are safeguarding the operation of a state-of-the-art 30-million-volt cyclotron at the University of Technology in Holland
In particular how to produce the hydrogen from that natural gas in a confined space, using a simple automated remotely controlled process.
Obviously very large scale industrial processes already exist to produce hydrogen from natural gas, but these technologies cannot be scaled down to compact size needed to be practical in a filling station context, and the costs of using these processes would be prohibitive.
The new University of Warwick research solves these problems by a combination of innovative heat exchange technology, novel ways of managing and using heat and pressure within a reactor, novel compact plated reactor technology, and the use of new coated nano-crystalline catalysts to greatly increase the efficiency of the reactions.
These techniques will allow the researchers to develop a reactor around the size of three average office desks which can be used in the confined space available on pre-existing petrol station forecourts and which will produce hydrogen at a cost effective rate and without any emissions problems.
The research will draw on technology developed by University of Warwick Process Technology Group researcher Dr Ashok Bhattacharya, and his research partners: Chart Heat Exchangers Ltd in Wolverhampton, England; the French Commissariat a l'Energie Atomique; the Norwegian Foundation for Technical and Industrial Research (SINTEF); The National Research Council of Italy; and catalyst specialists Dytech in Sheffield, UK.
Another advantage of the technology proposed by the Warwick team is that the process employs a number of stages at which hydrogen reaches different rates of purity.
This is ideal, as different sorts of fuel cell will require different mixes of hydrogen.
Thus the technology proposed can in one reactor simultaneously produce what one might describe as 2, 3 and 4 star hydrogen! The researchers are also considering using the technology to carry out hydrogen production within car engines and also as a possible replacement for large industrial hydrogen production processes.
• Warwick Process Technology: contact details and other news
• Email this article to a colleague
• Register for the free Processingtalk email newsletter
• Processingtalk Home Page

