GLOBE-Net, August 10, 2012 - The
U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE's) National Renewable Energy
Laboratory (NREL) recently completed a seven-year project to
demonstrate and evaluate hydrogen fuel cell electric vehicles
(FCEVs) and hydrogen fueling infrastructure in real-world
settings.
The National Fuel Cell Electric Vehicle Learning
Demonstration Final Report shows progress in extending vehicle
driving ranges and increasing fuel cell durability and discusses
NREL's key findings from the demonstration project.
The National Fuel Cell Electric Vehicle Learning
Demonstration was the world's largest single FCEV and hydrogen
fueling infrastructure demonstration to date. It generated data
from more than 500,000 individual vehicle trips covering 3.6
million miles traveled and 152,000 kg hydrogen produced or
dispensed.
"The project results show that fuel cell electric vehicles
have advanced rapidly," said Keith Wipke, acting manager of NREL's
Fuel Cell and Hydrogen Technologies Program and the report's lead
author.
"As vehicle manufacturers and other researchers worldwide
continue to focus on the remaining challenges of balancing
durability, cost, and high-volume manufacturability, there is
optimism that manufacturers will introduce FCEVs to the market
within the next few years."
NREL's Hydrogen Secure Data Center (HSDC) plays a
crucial role in the independent, third-party analysis of hydrogen
fuel cell technologies. While the raw data are protected in the
HSDC, the public may see aggregated results through composite data
products (CDPs), which communicate relevant technical results
without revealing proprietary data. NREL has published 99 CDPs related to fuel cell
durability, vehicle driving range, on-site hydrogen production
costs, and a wide variety of other topics.
DOE established interim, high-level technical targets in 2003 for FCEVs
and hydrogen fueling infrastructure with the goal of achieving them
by 2009. The targets were:
• 250-mile driving range
• 2,000-hour fuel cell durability
• $3 per gallon gasoline equivalent for hydrogen production
cost.
Technical results showed that at least one of the four
industry teams exceeded each of DOE's FCEV targets for driving
range and fuel cell durability, with a team achieving 254-mile
driving range and a team showing projected average fuel cell stack
durability of 2,521 hours. The report also evaluated a separate
FCEV capable of reaching a driving range of up to 430
miles.
Low on-site hydrogen production costs were difficult to
demonstrate through this project because current hydrogen stations
were not designed, constructed, and used as full-scale commercial
stations.
An independent review of
hydrogen production costs determined that the production cost
target could be met for at least one pathway (hydrogen produced
from natural gas) in commercialized hydrogen stations at sizes
comparable to gasoline stations.
While this project did not achieve DOE's hydrogen cost
target, an independent review panel examined the issue of hydrogen
production costs and determined that the production cost target
could be met for at least one pathway (hydrogen produced from
natural gas) in commercialized hydrogen stations at sizes
comparable to gasoline stations.
With increased availability of low-cost natural gas,
hydrogen costs can be decreased even further.
The Learning Demonstration project started in 2004 with
four major vehicle manufacturers (GM, Daimler, Hyundai-Kia, and
Ford) and three energy partners (Shell, BP, and Chevron)
contributing data for NREL analysis. Project costs were shared
50-50 between industry and EERE. Later, DOE's California Hydrogen
Infrastructure Project, executed by Air Products and Chemicals,
Inc., contributed data on its fueling stations.
"We received final project data from our industry partners
in October 2011, and have completed our analysis across the entire
demonstration period," Wipke said. "Through this project, 183 fuel
cell electric vehicles were deployed, 25 project fueling stations
were placed in use, and no fundamental safety issues were
identified."
For more information, visit NREL's Hydrogen Fuel Cell
Vehicle and Infrastructure Learning Demonstration website at www.nrel.gov/hydrogen/proj_learning_demo.html
or view the full report at www.nrel.gov/hydrogen/pdfs/54860.pdf.