The Mind of James Donahue Hydrogen Power |
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High School Kids Claim
Hydro-Solar Powered Car By James Donahue When I worked for the
White Mountain Independent in the late 1990s, I wrote stories about some great competitive meetings among Arizona high school
automobile mechanic groups. Encouraged by the schools
and local merchants that donated worn out old cars for the students to tinker with, they sought to rebuild these vehicles
into innovative redesigned cars powered by non-carbon based fuels. Even in those days these
whiz kids were proving that electric, methane, and natural gas engines were within our grasp. This year the If this is true, and
there is no reason to believe a prestigious newspaper like the Republic would generate a false report about something like
this. these kids, operating on a shoestring budget and throw-away junk automobile parts, did something the top engineers for
all of the auto companies combined have been struggling with for years. It isn’t that hydrogen
engines were hard to build. The infamous German Zeppelin Hindenburg was powered by a hydrogen burning engine when it went
down in flames in the late 1930s. The problem lies in the
generation of enough hydrogen gas to run all of the engines we have powering all of the automobiles of the world. Hydrogen
is not a natural fuel that can be simply mined from pockets in the ground, or pulled out of the air. It is plentiful in nature,
but only in minuscule amounts. It must be separated from the other elements. As the students at Phoenix
Central found, the easiest place to get hydrogen was by using electrolysis to split water. With the help of an alkali like
potassium hydroxide, a current is passed through the water to generate bubbles of hydrogen that collects at the cathode, and
the oxygen gathers at the anode. A simple generator running off the engine and/or a few solar panels like the ones used on
their pickup might be enough to power the electrolysis device, or hydrogen generator. Cory Waxman, the student’s
instructor, made it clear that the student-built car is only a demonstration project and not a practical vehicle. It has four
solar panels and a hydrogen-generating system that makes only enough fuel in a day to move the truck a few miles. Waxman said his students
worked on the project for four years before bringing it to life. He believes it is the only self-sustaining hydrogen vehicle
in the world that runs on a conventional internal-combustion engine. “Nobody has ever
made a car that runs on sunlight and water,” he said. “There are other cars that run on hydrogen, but they don’t
make their own fuel.” So are the The problem is quite
simple. It takes energy to separate hydrogen. The current method of collecting this gas as a fuel calls for burning hot fossil
fuels. There is debate over whether solar panels will ever be adequate to be a suitable substitute. That the Bush Administration
is encouraging the development of new and improved methods of generating hydrogen may be a step in the right direction. German inventor Rudolf
Erren was among the first to study the use of hydrogen in combustion engines in the 1920s. He developed a successful method
of conversion and built what is remembered as the Erren engine. It was said he put that engine into an estimated 2,000-3000
cars, busses and trucks. Unfortunately it was
hydrogen that inflated the Hindenburg when it went down in flames in Of all the car makers,
BMW has apparently been leading the pack in the contemporary development of combustion engines that use hydrogen. That band of high school
students in |
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