Fhybrid: Hydrogen Fuel
Cell Scooter
30/Sep/2006 Filed in:
Technology
An
industrial design student in The Netherlands has
built a prototype scooter that is designed to be run
on hydrogen.
Crijn Bouman of Delft University of Technology
designed the scooter for use in inner cities.
He calls it the Fhybrid.
"The look and feel of the scooter are aimed at
selling the clean technology inside," he said in a
statement today.
The scooter has an electric motor powered by a
(Li-)ion battery. If the Fhybrid is ever put into
production, the idea is to charge the battery with a
fuel-cell system, which would derive its energy from
a tank of hydrogen. While scientists are working to
make such systems more efficient, obtaining hydrogen
(by splitting it out of water) is for now too costly
to be practical. Scientists
disagree whether
it will ever be viable.
The prototype scooter uses a simulated fuel-cell to
recharge the battery.
"A special course and various permits are required to
build a hydrogen-powered engine. It wasn't possible
to achieve this during the time period of my
graduation project," Bouman explained. "The faculty
is now trying to assemble all the necessary means to
fully develop the hydrogen-powered scooter."
The scooter also recharges the battery by snagging
energy during braking.
Since two-wheeled vehicles rely primarily on
front-wheel braking for efficient stops, Bouman's
scooter is front-wheel drive—better to capture the
braking energy, he explained.
The Fhybrid has a top speed of 40 mph. Bouman says it
accelerates faster than regular scooters and could
travel approximately 124 miles on a tank of
hydrogen