Hybrid Electric Propulsion for Boats, Diesel-Electric, etc

Discussion in 'Hybrid' started by brian eiland, Oct 12, 2011.

  1. RayThackeray
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    RayThackeray Senior Member

    Fundamentally people need to understand that the act of producing hydrogen and using it to generate power elsewhere is just a form of energy transmission. Instead of sending electricity down cables for example, the hydrogen in tanks just releases stored energy.

    There is always an inefficiency, which means that energy is LOST between producing the hydrogen and actually using it in a motor.

    One might ask "Why do it then?" The answer is that in mass production, power generation facilities are considerably more efficient than your diesel or car engine, so from a system perspective, fuel cells can enable a theoretically more energy efficient system.
     
  2. Frog4
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    Frog4 Proletariat

    not a lack of understanding, power in minus inefficiencies = power out ...
     
  3. Dave Gudeman
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    Dave Gudeman Senior Member

    If I keep pointing out that this stuff is urban legend, do you think some day I'll stop reading it?

    There was never any kind of consensus among scholars that the earth was flat. This is just urban legend. Scholars always knew that the earth was a sphere. Ancient Greeks actually calculated its diameter pretty accurately.

    Also, there was never a scientific consensus that the universe revolves around the earth, because the end of this consensus pretty much corresponds with the beginning of science. However, even though the theory wasn't exactly scientific, there certainly was evidence for it --and very good evidence at that.

    The other things you listed either were never actually the scientific consensus or there was good evidence for them at the time.

    A lot of people have an unrealistic view of science, beleiving that as long as you go with the evidence you can't be wrong so they reason backwards from the fact that a theory was wrong to the assumption that there must not have been evidence. That is not sound reasoning.
     
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  4. Kay9
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    Kay9 1600T Master

    Your just not getting it. Yes a gas or diesel engine once started will run off of said fuel without batt input provided there is an alternator. Your arguement is your 5KW engine will power not only the 150w Alternator but also the 5KW engine once its going. The analogy dosnt hold up as the gas/diesel engine isnt "powered" by the alternator it is powered by the gas/diesel. Your 5kw fuel cell is powered by the H1. Your 5KW fuel cell cannot run and make fuel at the same time. Or it can but the loss will eventually = 0 at which point your Fuel cell will have no "FUEL" .

    If I am wrong simply build one, drive up here and I promise to buy it from you for whatever you ask.
     
  5. Frog4
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    Frog4 Proletariat

    I got it fine. Folks here are confusing combustion of H2 with the conversion of H2. Fuel cells do not have the inefficiencies of H2 ICE setups.

    Until it runs out of fuel, just like an H2 fuel cell.

    Sure it will, just like our gas/diesel example. And "engine" should be replaced with "fuel cell" (no moving parts) entirely different technology. 150W (gas generator) supplies H2 (fuel) to the 5kW generator/reformer (engine). The input is from the 150W solar panel in my original project > 48VDC 105aH battery bank > H2 lab gas generator + RO/DI water > 5kW H2 fuel cell

    and the project is "powered" buy the H2 fuel cell.

    Solar feeds the 48VDC 105aH battery bank and the gas generator. The "fuel" is made/processed in the gas generator, which is fed into the fuel cell. All separate "systems". And YES, eventually it will run out of "fuel". No perpetual motion garbage ...

    I hate driving, and I'm not looking to sell anything. Only sharing info and ideas.
     
  6. Frog4
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    Frog4 Proletariat

    Remember PLANET Pluto? How about nuclear fission (over unity)?
     
  7. Frog4
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    Frog4 Proletariat

    this is a REFORMER based system which uses H2O (carrier) + methanol (consumable):

    Electrical inputs are (4) 12VDC batteries in series rated at 105aH = 48VDC @105aH

    Reformer system draws 3A @ 48VDC from "battery bank" for 40-100+ hours into H2 reformer producing 5kW @ 48VDC/104A

    ElectraGen™ ME System

    There are similar systems which only use RO/DI water (carrier) thru an MEA fuel cell. The (consumables) in those are Platinum or Ruthenium and others under development.
     
  8. kerosene
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    kerosene Senior Member

    No fossil fuels but methanol is fine? And now its a reformer again?
     
  9. Frog4
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    Frog4 Proletariat

    it is an EXAMPLE ... wow ...

    Use an MEA fuel cell with plain ole RO/DI water and you take out the whole "reformer" example ...
     
  10. RayThackeray
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    RayThackeray Senior Member

    If you're using methanol, you're back to consuming fossil fuels.

    I hereby bet you $1,000,000 that the systems you've been proposing will be no more efficient for propulsion than a common diesel engine. Now it's up to you to try to collect - but it'll take proof.

    In the meantime, a conventional diesel/electric hybrid or use of hydrogen as stored energy should be more efficient within limits, and neither of these will break the laws of thermodynamics.
     
  11. Frog4
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    Frog4 Proletariat

    You're correct. But we are not using fossil fuel, except on the front end, i.e. component manufacturing.

    Actually current systems are pushing 70% efficiency compared to ICE which are lucky to get 20%. As far as "proof", I'm not a Google/Research Mommy. I'll send my knuckle draggers over to bust kneecaps and break fingers :)

    This system doesn't break any "laws".
     
  12. Mick@itc
    Joined: Jan 2011
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    Mick@itc Junior Member

    Gee this is going well...

    I was hoping to read something about hybrid electric populsion for boats, not a long rather nasty discussion about fuel cells, etc. Can we get back to to boat propulsion and take this conversion into a new thread titled Fuel cell technology facts or maybe a seperate one on efficiency/effectiveness calcs for solar/hydrogen production.
    Regardless, can we get some input from people on why the weight of the batteries seem to be the deal breaker in most proposed systems. There seems to be a cost/weight tradeoff that seems to be a killer. would love to hear some thoughts and facts on this.
    Thnaks
    Mick
     
  13. WestVanHan
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    WestVanHan Not a Senior Member

    Seriously?

    Ok,I'll tell you: they are full of lead and ARE TOO HEAVY.


    Though I doubt this will kill discussion on the matter,here is the battery sizer from Lifeline:
    http://www.lifelinebatteries.com/marinesizing.php

    Enter in 48 Volts and say 300 amps to get you say 15 kW. At 5 hours reserve,so enough to get you ~40 miles in a decent sailboat,you will need 56 of these:
    http://www.lifelinebatteries.com/marineflyer.php?id=8

    They're 156 pounds and you'll need 56 of them.

    Thats 8700 pounds.

    End of story.
     
  14. Kay9
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    Kay9 1600T Master

    Dont forget the 5 year replacement cost of the Batts and the Controller....Everytime I do the calculations its roughly what i would have spent on a new motor and the fuel to run it.
     

  15. kerosene
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    kerosene Senior Member

    this is from another thread for comparison

    Lets see how that 5000 liters compares to what your boat can do. (his boat assumes following: battery: 108KWH ,i.e. 90 pcs deep cycle batteries (100Ah 12V)=3000KGs)


    5000l * 800g/l (density) * 200g/kwh(diesel effciency) = 20,000kwh

    so we get 20,000kwh from 5000l diesel. How many cycles on the batteries does that equal.

    your battery is 108kwh nominal. Much over 50% depth of discharge will kill the lead acid batteries in no time but i will give you depth of discharge 66%. Also in these calculations I am not counting in any losses in your electric power train (at least 10-20% losses)

    20,000kwh/(108kwh*0.66)=280.6 cycles

    so your windboat would have to drain the batteries 280 times to equal same amount of energy as the diesel numbers you suggested.
    -----
    More sensible numbers for your boat would be a cycle a week. Which would be ~70kwh/week ~3600kwh/year. That would equal 900L of diesel/year.

    I am not penalizing you for far less optimal boat shape and weight that would probably make significant difference in hull efficiency in favor of the diesel.

    ---


    The drivel above is for "windboat's" boat which would (supposedly) get 14nm range out of his 108kwh battery pack. Just 20hp with 108kwh lead acid pack will runs dry in under 5 hours. (108kwh*0.66(depth of discharge)/ 20hp*.735(hp to kw)=4.8h).
    3000kg of "fuel" to run small motor for 5h with nowhere to go when it runs out. Not so attractive. Also the batteries cost $15000+, so $3000-5000 /year.







    the combination of factors makes electric only interesting or feasible in very small boats (row boat) or specialty applications where things like reduced noise are more important that financial/efficiency matters.
     
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