Hydrogen Combustion

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  • Опубликовано: 27 фев 2023
  • During UK Hydrogen Week (13-17th February), Brunel University London is hosting a series of webinars called 'Thinking Differently in Hydrogen'.
    Each day's webinar will focus on a specific hydrogen related topic and will include a talk from a Brunel academic followed by a leading industrial figure developing technology to support the growing UK hydrogen economy
    Tuesday 14th Feb - Hydrogen Combustion
    Join the conversation with Brunel's Dr Xinyan Wang and Michael Goodisman of Lifting Gas Ltd.

Комментарии • 33

  • @hydrogentv
    @hydrogentv 9 месяцев назад +3

    Awesome~ hydrogen combustion~~🎉🎉

  • @mikemikeyee
    @mikemikeyee 11 месяцев назад +3

    Neat stuff at the 17:00 mark. Where the direct port engines probably make better sense here.

  • @dikshamen
    @dikshamen 3 месяца назад

    Hydrogen can be easily produced from water for allmost free...
    It enables The end of need of oil ( with also removing all its huge costs and pollution of oils and petrol production and transportation from the oild wells )has huge postive geopolitical implications....
    We the ordinary ppl need it now.

  • @spiritzweispirit1st638
    @spiritzweispirit1st638 9 месяцев назад +7

    YT Video I watched ' Custom 50's Hot Rod Truck' 383 Chevy' 300 miles on 100% Hydrogen a 20 or 30 or so Gallon Tank' 'mounted in the truck bed. 500 Horse Power! Daily Driver!🏁 _ So all the Hydrogen Hater Shills 'Can Go Pound Sand! Hydrogen+Electric _ Will Be The Future!🌦️

    • @williambixby3785
      @williambixby3785 8 месяцев назад

      Toyota is already making them and I’ve been researching a company called liquid piston that makes a new style engine that can use hydrogen as a source and they have a lot of military contracts. Turns out if this new engine (much smaller and lighter) is equipped on a generator all you need is a fuel cell and water to power everything and don’t need fuel transported to your location… the possibility are literally endless!

  • @jeston286
    @jeston286 5 месяцев назад

    Ive seen people who remove the fuel tank of their motorcycle and build and install a hydrogen seperator, and they run fine so my question is this if i made a seperator and fasioned it for my old school harley what are the chances i would blow my bike to pieces?

  • @str8up598
    @str8up598 2 месяца назад

    Stanly Meyer comes to mind! 🤔

  • @yahyayarim5727
    @yahyayarim5727 Год назад +1

    Rica etsem altyazı seçeneklerine Türkçe dil seçeneği ekleyebilir misiniz ?Sizi anlamak ve takip etmek istiyorum !!!

  • @bindiberry6280
    @bindiberry6280 9 месяцев назад +3

    What about household hydrogen generation from sea-water and salt water battery?!!

    • @Kannot2023
      @Kannot2023 9 месяцев назад

      If you generate hidrogen from salt water, you will generate chlorine which is toxic

  • @pubguc6771
    @pubguc6771 Месяц назад

    Importing subject hydrogen fossil fuel production

  • @saatee100
    @saatee100 6 месяцев назад

    Aah another Hindenburg 😂

    • @atrumluminarium
      @atrumluminarium 6 месяцев назад +1

      The Hindenburg also had a highly flammable hull. Also it was designed to work with helium and the Americans used hydrogen to cut corners. With hydrogen one would need to account for embrittlement and diffusion through the container walls which were never considered if the airship was designed to work with helium

    • @Tasmantor
      @Tasmantor Месяц назад

      @@atrumluminarium The Americans didn't operate the Hindenburg, they didn't cut any corners. They wouldn't supply the NAZIs with helium because they might use it for war, so they moved to hydrogen.

  • @ravdobrzynski
    @ravdobrzynski 8 месяцев назад

    5:56 ???? głupi czy o drogę pyta? Jak widać na obrazku temperatura na Ziemi widocznie się zwiększyła... kolorowe kreseczki.

  • @mb-3faze
    @mb-3faze Год назад +4

    Hydrogen ICE - quite literally the dumbest thing ever considered for vehicular transportation.

    • @CatchiestWorm12
      @CatchiestWorm12 Год назад +11

      As opposed to battery powered firestarters, made possible by African children mining lithium

    • @mb-3faze
      @mb-3faze Год назад +2

      @@CatchiestWorm12 There are now millions of EVs on the road and still the statistics show that more gasoline cars catch fire every day. Also, lithium is extracted mostly in Australia and no children are involved. Cobalt (poorly mined in central africa) is no longer part of EV battery technology. Good to keep up with developments.

    • @tominatorxx
      @tominatorxx Год назад

      ​@@mb-3faze I'll be honest, I'm kind of sceptical with the statistics, that they give us for EV fires. Why? Because numbers range from 1/5 of petrol cars to 1/100 if you have to believe EV minded sources.
      Some examples:
      One source uses the data that was spoon-fed by Elon Musk himself of how EVs are 11x less likely to catch fire. The data they used to compare is from 2015, which frankly is misleading due to the sample size of EVs being too low and also EVs not having aged that much at that point.
      Another source claims it's 20x less likely. But there they only used the numbers from Sweden, with only 614.000 EVs on the road at the time of their research. The study they did is representative for Sweden, but not something we can apply to the rest of the world given that in Sweden we are talking about an environment that's a lot colder compared to a lot of other places in the world. Hotter regions are the ones where EVs struggle more with the problem of car fires. Ideally, we would get worldwide numbers, but there we run again in the problem of the sample size being too low right now, given that some regions in the world barely have any EVs driving around.
      Then there is a source that claims petrol cars are 100x more likely to go up in flames... I mean... (to be fair, this source electrek is known to be pulling numbers out of their *ss). They use fire recalls to measure, which is an idiotic measurement if you ask me. A recall doesn't mean that the car is 100% likely to develop that problem it's recalled for. In a lot of cases, the most serious risks (like fires etc.) get recalled if there is only a slight notion of the possibility it could happen.
      Then there's the discussion of hybrid cars. Are they petrol vehicles? Studies actually agree that hybrids are the most likely to catch fire. More than petrol cars and EVs combined (in the USA, so again not worldwide unfortunately, so also take this with a grain of salt). The study did found though that: "combustion vehicles often covered a wide variety of mechanical areas - from wiring issues to fuel leaks to component failures", whereas EVs and Hybrids: "Fire risk recalls for hybrid and electric vehicles, on the other hand, almost always centered around the battery pack".
      What I'm trying to explain here is that some studies throw Hybrids together with petrol cars to compare them with EVs, while the battery pack is usually the issue for Hybrids. Which again is a disingenuous way of representing data.
      To be fair, I don't think the amount of cars on fire is necessarily the issue. The biggest issue is putting out a fire. I can only imagine, here in Europe, what would happen if almost all vehicles in a street are EVs. If one catches fire, chances are much higher of the fire spreading out of control due to how difficult it is to put out an electrical fire. I live in a fairly small town, and it was big news that the local government had bought a water container to submerse an EV for 48 hours. Which is fine for the limited amount of EVs on the road here in my town. But the earlier example I've given, with a whole street of EVs, is going to cause an insane amount of issues. It's hypothetical, I know. But it's a fact that EVs are difficult to put out and as a result have a way higher chance to make a fire spread out. Putting a car submersed in water for 48 - 72 hours is not a very practical thing. Especially when there are a huge amount of EVs on the road. It takes 1500 - 3700 (500 - 1.000 gallons) litres of water to put out a petrol car, compared to 113.500 - 151.000 litres (30.000 - 40.000 gallons). That also kind of feels like wasting a valuable resource, and not all that environmentally friendly, especially if it would happen on a large scale.
      Anyway, that's just my 2 cents.

    • @mb-3faze
      @mb-3faze 11 месяцев назад

      @@stix2you Thanks for your considered reply - and I did read all of it. I wont come as much of a surprise to say that I disagree with every point you made! Just going backwards through you points: I follow the progress on electron storage technology closely and it's worth noting that there are already electric commuter planes in operation. The newer so-called solid state batteries are getting pretty close to the 500Wh per kg energy density the flyboys say we need, in fact 700Wh/kg has already been established. As for trains - there is literally no excuse for not electrifying and most are, of course. Boats - they should at least be battery operated anywhere near port. 6) Residential generation. Sure powerwalls are expensive - I wouldn't buy one. But PV is pretty cheap especially if you do some install yourself. A 3kW grid-tied 8 panel system will set you back about 2 grand. I've installed 5 such systems for friends and family. Batteries (because they are generally lithium) are not really viable, currently, but the iron-air batteries (commercial size at the moment) and some flow-battery tech will bring the price down to a quarter of the feel good, smug powerwall level. Looking forward to that.
      Rather than rattling on about the other points, my major concern about hydrogen is the obvious fervor of the fossil fuel industry for it. That should sound some significant alarm bells. Why are they so keen to support something that will kill off their business of extracting free stuff from the ground and then sell that stuff to us all the while benefitting from a trillion dollars in direct subsidies every year? (that's an entirely verifiable claim) Well, because they know they only viable way of generating industrial quantities of hydrogen is through reforming methane - what a surprise that they keep that under wraps!
      Safety - lol - have a major crash in your EV and the chances are you'll walk away even if the batteries get a bit flamey. In a hydrogen car crash when some truck has ripped the value mechanism off the 10,000 psi tank? You are 100% dead. Oh - and prepare for your house insurance to skyrocket - even if it's only your neighbor that has the hydrogen car. The car/fossil fuel people hoodwinked us with leaded fuel (which they knew way back during Midgley's time was terrible) and most recently with diesel lies. Hydrogen is just their latest gambit and they are blitzing social media with carefully crafted lies and absolutely boatloads of money.
      I have been engaged on the hydrogen debate for more than 15 years when good old Arnold Schwarzenegger pushed for hydrogen in California. Big oil has abandoned California and are now pushing their hydrogen propaganda in less enlightened areas.

    • @static_Tricolor_camry
      @static_Tricolor_camry 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@mb-3fazeThe only Gasoline cars catching on fire are Hyundai trash cans and Kia's junk. That's a big lie when it comes to Toyota's and American made vehicles, get your facts straight before you write a statement with lies. EV cars are disposable junks that runs on a dozen batteries and will never last 20 years from the date it left the Assembly line.

  • @commonsense4207
    @commonsense4207 10 месяцев назад +5

    Lots of False Info or You may know them as Lies.