How Does A Hydrogen Car Work | Future Technology

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Published 2023-02-04
Part 2:
How do hydrogen cars work? - Parts explained in detail:    • How Do Hydrogen Cars Work??  

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All Comments (21)
  • @BeyondFuel
    💥Part 2 💥 👉How Does A Hydrogen Car Work | Parts & Functions - https://youtu.be/p5BYBSk_MQk
  • @user-be4ok4ir2f
    Everytime I watch more videos about these electric and hydrogen cars, I become more convinced that gas and diesel cars are absolutely the BEST!!!!
  • @donwilson6965
    In the year 2000 the thought of a electric car that could be performance and travel more than 100 miles was laughed at as a fairy tale. Now no one is laughing. Hydrogen is NEW and the technology is developing fast along with all the nay sayers saying this won't work. Hydrogen cars fuel in a few minutes. Teslas .. almost an hour. I much rather be driving.
  • @101ST-AIRBORNE
    The water powered car has already been invented, they just buried the invention and killed the inventor
  • I think technology will advance and hydrogen powered vehicles will become practical and economically viable. And the technology and the process for producing hydrogen will be truly green. Even the technology for producing lithium ion batteries isn't green either .
  • @Bobbydell
    Winter driving would be a nightmare. Icy roads BECAUSE of the cars. Then what? We add more chemicals to the roads? That can't be good for the environment, your car, or wallet.
  • @drblahblah929
    You didn't mentioned the amount of water required to product 1 kg of green hydrogen. You didn't mentioned that large amount of electricity is needed to product green hydrogen.
  • @BeyondFuel
    See also this video. It provides a more detailed breakdown of how hydrogen cars work in terms of their parts and functions -> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p5BYBSk_MQk
  • Before gas engine, you had steam engine. Hydrogen is hard and expensive to harvest (so was gas and oil) but like any other problems, I’m confident we will solve it. Already, Toyota has something promising. I can foresee Hydrogen powered vehicle within the next ten years.
  • Very concise video and well done, but at 1:56 is a bad graphic. You're showing an ICE H2 engine, not a fuel cell. ICE H2 engines require more like 10+ times the energy as BEVs. And regarding 3 times for fuel cells, that's best case at the moment where as the H2 is delivered via pipeline. If you have to truck it compressed, or worse liquefy it, it's more like 4 times the energy per mile. It's an OK technology to fit where other technologies can't meet the specific requirements.
  • @macflod
    Where i live therebis talk of offshore windturbines been used in conjunction with all the sea water to make the hydrogen. Its perfect for offloading onto tankers as much offshore oil is at the moment. Its one option i heard for getting greener fuel.
  • @exterminator4808
    But the question is "Why?!" Why use hydrogen when you already have BEVs? It's like taking the very longer route in going from point A to point B just because you can! Let's take into consideration the best case scenario for hydrogen: it's produced by electrolysis of water using electricity from solar, wind, hydroelectric and nuclear sources i.e. it's 🟢 hydrogen. Even though it's a carbon neutral process, you have to consume energy just to make energy which is non-sensical. This energy can simply be sent into the grid and it can power EVs at homes or at EV charging stations just like that! Instead, we have to purify water to electrolyse it and build a whole new bunch of different infrastructures like electrolysers, supply chains, safety systems, dispensing stations etc. All this costs a lot of time and money to build and maintain, something that is not true for BEVs since we already have a grid in place which is 70% of the job done! Then imagine the inferno that would be caused if there was a leak. Petrol at least needs a flame to ignite, hydrogen does so just by coming in contact with the oxygen of air! Thus hydrogen is more hazardous than fossil fuels. And finally, researchers have said that large scale leaks of hydrogen can also potentially act as a greenhouse gas. So you would have to be total muppets to use hydrogen instead of electricity for EVs.
  • Some technology may log behind but behind the scenes it been work on to improve and refine it to make it becomes more common and easy to dealt with gradually over time somethings take a little time longer than some but when it take off action.
  • @frankm7707
    If the demand is there, the price will go down. Remember twenty years ago a 50 inch LCD HDTV cost 50k USD and now it is barely $500.
  • @dope7kids
    A drawback that first came to me is if you had 1000s of these in a cold environment, would they expell large amounts of water on the road requiring salt trucks to be continuously dumping on the highway.
  • @GarzaB
    Hydrogen is the most abundant atom in the universe for a reason!
  • @crazydudetz
    What about leakage? The SLS rocket uses liquid hydrogen to power the rocket and it has leaking problems. Hydrogen is a small atom. Very difficult to seal.