Fuel Car Cell
Fuel Car Cell
Fuel Car Cell
February 2003
MIT LFEE 2003-001 RP
ii
iii
Table of Contents
Abstract
Introduction
Scope
On-the-Road Results
Life-Cycle Results
11
Conclusions
11
References
13
List of Tables
Table 1.
15
Table 2.
Driving Cycles
16
Table 3.
17
Table 4.
18
Table 5.
19
Table 6.
20
Table 7.
21
Table 8.
22
Table 9.
23
24
25
26
iv
List of Figures
Figure 1. Relative Consumption of On-Board Fuel Energy
27
28
29
Introduction
Automotive manufacturers and suppliers around the world are investing heavily in
the development of fuel cell systems (FCSs) as potential power sources for light duty
vehicles. In our previous assessment of new automobile technologies that could be
commercialized by 2020 [1], [2], future FCSs showed no advantage over future internal
combustion engine (ICE) systems with respect to life-cycle greenhouse gas (GHG)
emissions, energy efficiency, or cost when the hydrogen used to power the FCSs
originated from a hydrocarbon raw material such as natural gas or gasoline.
As in all comparisons of future alternatives, the results depended on the particular
assumptions made about each alternative and are subject to large uncertainties inherent in
looking ahead for many years. In the study reported here, we used the same
methodologies used in [1] but we have made more optimistic assumptions about the
performance of future FCSs. Our purpose was to determine how competitive FCSs
would be in comparison with ICESs assuming advances in FCS technology closer to the
higher targets foreseen by some FCS advocates. The study does not make predictions
about which technologies will be developed nor judgments about which technologies
should be developedissues for the marketplace and for public policy that are not
examined here.
Scope
The primary motivation for the assessments reported both here and previously
was to evaluate new automobile technologies which might function with lower emissions
of GHGs, generally believed to contribute to global warming. The GHG of most concern
is carbon dioxide (CO2) which is contained in the exhaust gases of vehicles burning
petroleum or other carbon-containing fuels. If public policy or market forces result in
constraints on GHG emissions, automobiles and other light-duty vehiclesa key part of
the transportation sectorwill be candidates for those constraints since the transportation
sector accounts for about 30% of all CO2 emissions in OECD countries, and about 20%
worldwide. Therefore, new low-GHG emitting technologies are of broad interest.
To validly assess and compare emissions from future vehicle technologies, the
methodology must consider the total system over its entire life cycle. The life cycle of an
automotive technology is defined here to include all the steps required to provide the fuel,
to manufacture the vehicle, and to operate and maintain the vehicle throughout its
lifetime up to and including scrappage and recycling. An example of why life-cycle
assessment is essential is the case of an automobile using a new fuel that permits the
automobile to consume less fuel and emit less CO2 per kilometer traveled while on the
road. But there may be no net benefit if more energy and more CO2 emissions are
required to provide that new fuel (instead of the established fuel) before the fuel ever gets
into the automobile tank.
Provision of the fuel from primary energy sources such as petroleum or natural
gas must be considered from the point of resource recovery from underground reservoirs
through transportation to refineries or manufacturing plants where those resources are
converted to fuels for vehicles. The fuel must then be distributed and deposited in the
2
vehicles tank. The total of these steps is often called well-to-tank. Analogously, the
vehicle manufacture begins with ores or other raw and recycled materials necessary to
make the parts included in a vehicle, fabrication and assembly of those parts, and
distribution of the finished vehicle to the customer. The vehicle is then operated by the
first or subsequent customer, with maintenance and repair requirements, until the end of
its lifetime when the vehicle is scrapped and recycled. Vehicle operation is often called
tank-to-wheels. Well-to-wheels ordinarily means well-to tank plus tank-towheels but does not ordinarily include vehicle manufacture which should be included in
a comprehensive life cycle analysis.
The new results reported here are confined to the tank-to-wheels part of the life
cycle. However, we combine those new results with earlier results on well-to-tank and
vehicle manufacturing to make new comparisons on a total life cycle basis.
Vehicle and Driving Parameters
All the vehicles examined in this study are designed to be functional equivalents
of todays typical US mid-size family sedan. For the customer, this means that
characteristics such as acceleration, range, passenger and trunk space are maintained in
future vehicles. All vehicles are designed to have the same ratio of peak power to vehicle
mass, namely 75 W/kg, which is approximately todays average value and roughly
equalizes the short-time acceleration performance of all vehicles; exactly equalizing all
aspects of vehicle performance would require more complex analysis beyond the scope of
our study. The methodologies used for assessing and comparing technologies are
described in detail in [1] and are not repeated here.
The propulsion systems reported here consist of a) advanced spark and compression
ignition ICEs, fueled by gasoline and diesel fuel respectively, in both parallel hybrid and
non-hybrid configurations, and b) fuel cell systems fueled by compressed 100% hydrogen
or by hydrogen (about 40% by volume) in gas generated by processing gasoline on board,
also in both hybrid and non-hybrid configurations. The systems are listed in Table 1.
For all hybrid systems the battery and electric motor were sized to provide a ratio
of peak electrical power to vehicle mass of 25W/kg, and the power plant (ICE or FC) to
provide 50 W/kg, giving the total of 75 W/kg cited above. All hybrid systems included
regenerative braking. Although these hybrids provide short-time vehicle acceleration
comparable to non-hybrids, they have inferior performance at higher speeds while
climbing long hills or towing heavy loads. We did not attempt to optimize hybrid designs
by assessing options such as varying the relative battery and engine sizes. Choosing
optimum designs would depend on selecting from particular characteristics of cost, fuel
economy, and performance those characteristics to be given priority.
All vehicles, except the 2001 reference and the 2020 evolutionary base case,
used the same type of advanced body with changes designed to reduce vehicle mass (e.g.
more extensive use of aluminum) and resistances (e.g. lower drag coefficient and rolling
resistance). See [1] for details. Both propulsion system and body features consist of
changes we believe could be commercialized broadly by 2020 if pursued aggressively
with some qualifications about fuel cell system performance discussed further below.
3
These vehicles are compared to the typical current US mid-size family sedan, for
reference, and to a 2020 evolutionary baseline. Both the reference and the baseline
are gasoline-fueled ICE cars with similar capacity and performance; the baseline has
evolutionary improvements in fuel and vehicle over the next 20 years or so similar to
improvements achieved during the last 20 years.
The relative fuel economy of different propulsion systems can be expected to
change with changes in the power demand on the system, a function of the way the
vehicle is driven. Therefore, we have examined the economy of each system following
each of the three different driving cycles described in Table 2.
The performance of each of the vehicles we assessed was calculated using
computer simulations described in [1]. Originally developed by Guzzella and Amstutz
[3] at the Eidgenossiche Technische Hochschule (ETH), Zurich, these simulations backcalculate the fuel consumed by the propulsion system by driving the vehicle through a
specified cycle. Such simulations require performance models for each major propulsion
system component as well as for each vehicle driving resistance. The simulations we
used, which are updated and expanded versions of the Guzzella and Amstutz simulations,
are best characterized as aggregate engineering models which quantify component
performance in sufficient detail to be reasonably accurate but avoid excessive detail
which would be difficult to justify for predictions relevant to 2020.
Fuel Cell System Performance
Since the emphasis in this study is on the comparative energy consumption of
advanced fuel cell vehicles, our assumptions about the performance of fuel cell systems
(FCS) are reported in some detail below. We define the FCS here to include a fuel
processor (for gasoline fuel) which converts the fuel chemically to hydrogen, hydrogen
cleanup equipment, a stack which converts hydrogen electrochemically to electric
power, associated equipment for heat, air, and water management, and auxiliary
equipment such as pumps, blowers, and controls. Fuel tanks are excluded as is all
equipment downstream of the stacks net electrical DC output.
The overall efficiency of an FCS is defined here as the net DC energy output of
the stack (after subtracting from the gross output the electrical energy needed to operate
FCS auxiliaries such as pumps and compressors) divided by the lower heating value
(LHV) of the fuel consumed in the FCSwhether gasoline fed to a fuel processor or
hydrogen gas from a high pressure tank or other on-board hydrogen storage device. That
overall efficiency will vary with the load on the fuel cell and will generally increase as
load decreases except at very low loads when parasitic power losses and/or fuel processor
heat losses become comparatively high and overall efficiency declines.
We assume that all these FCSs include proton exchange membrane (PEM) stacks
in which hydrogen, pure or dilute, at the anode side of the electrolytea plastic
membrane such as a perfluorinated and sulfonated polymerreacts with oxygen in air at
the cathode side of the electrolyte to produce water and electric power. The anode and
cathode are porous electrodes impregnated with catalytic metals, mostly platinum. We
4
assume the stacks operate at about 80C and a maximum pressure (at peak power) of
about 3 atmospheres.
The main loss of efficiency in the FCS fueled by pure hydrogen occurs in the
stack itself where some of the fuel energy consumed is converted to heatthrough
resistance losses and other types of polarization lossesrather than to electrical
energy. The secondary loss in these FCSs is consumption of electrical energy to drive
motors essential to the FCS itself, for compressing air and for pumping water, for
example.
FCSs fueled by dilute hydrogen from gasoline reformate have the same two types
of losses in efficiency that pure-hydrogen FCSs suffer, but also have two additional
types: 1) losses in the fuel processor during conversion of gasoline (by reaction with
steam and air) to hydrogen, and subsequent cleanup of that hydrogen to remove stack
catalyst poisons, and 2) incomplete hydrogen utilization, namely losses of unreacted
hydrogen in tail gas from the stack where the hydrogen becomes so dilute that it must
be purged but can be used to supply energy to the fuel processor or to the air compressorexpander. We assume a hydrogen utilization of 85% as we did in [1]. That is, 15% of
the hydrogen entering the stack from the fuel processor is purged and thus leaves the
stack unreacted.
The key objectives for advanced FCSs for vehicles are improved overall
efficiency, as a result of reducing some or all of the losses described above, and reduced
cost and weight per unit of net electrical power output.
Characteristics of Advanced Fuel Cell Systems
We estimated the extent to which advanced technology might reduce FCS losses
by reviewing recent fuel cell literature and by discussing the outlook for
commercialization before 2020 with FCS analysts and with commercial component and
vehicle developers. Our objective was to identify and assume advances in FCS
technology that were plausiblebut not assuredwith aggressive development, but to
not assume advances that depended on hoped-for technical innovation not yet
demonstrated at least in bench experiments. We included only advances whose cost
looked at least plausible commercially. For example, stack polarization losses could be
reduced even more than we assumedbut at increased costby increasing concentration
of platinum catalysts or by increasing stack area for a given power output, or by both.
Specifically, the new stack polarization data we chose corresponded to the current
Ballard Mark 900 80 kW stack [4] with unit cell voltage increased by 0.05 V (about 5 to
8%) at all current densities to anticipate further improvements. We also assumed that
operating a stack of given area on gasoline reformate rather than pure hydrogen would
reduce peak power density and cell voltage by amounts consistent with the Ballard Mark
900 experience and with other previous data [5]. Table 3 lists the polarization data used
in this report. For our stack conditions, the ideal unit cell voltage is 1.22-1.23 V; the
ideal voltage excludes all the losses found in an operating fuel cell.
For this study we define peak power as the power level at which unit cell voltage
drops to 0.6V for both pure hydrogen and reformate fuels. Although somewhat more
power could be produced by the stack by drawing more current and allowing the unit cell
voltage to drop below 0.6V, heat removal problems increase and 0.6V is probably close
to the minimum voltage for optimizing the total system. Heat released in the stack is
equal to the higher heating value of the hydrogen consumed minus the gross electrical
energy produced.
At all current densities, the voltages assumed are significantly (as much as 40%)
higher than the voltages assumed in [1] which were the voltages reported by Thomas [6]
and which represented published data in 1998. The consequences of this change for
overall system efficiency are discussed further below. In the stacks considered in this
report, the pure hydrogen stack at gross peak power operated at a unit cell voltage of 0.60
V, a current density of 1300 mA/cm2, and a power density of 780 mW/cm2 while the
reformate stack, at peak, operated at 0.60 V, 1050 mA/cm2, and 630 mW/cm2.
For FCSs fueled by processing gasoline to hydrogen, a customary expression of
efficiency of the processor (including removal of CO from the gas stream) is equal to the
LHV of the hydrogen in the gas stream leaving the processor divided by the LHV of the
gasoline fed to the processor. This efficiency is often increased by supplying heat to the
fuel processor by burning the hydrogen in the tail gas purged from the stack, referred to
previously.
The efficiency of the FCS declines at low power output because heat losses from
the fuel processor became a significant fraction of the heat required for the reaction to
make hydrogen. Published data for performance at low outputs are sparse and probably
are sensitive to the specifics of processor and heat exchanger design; the numbers
assumed therefore are particularly uncertain.
Table 4 lists the efficiencies assumed in this study for gasoline fuel processors
feeding a stack whose peak power output is about 60 kW. At high power, the efficiency
is 0.81 LHV compared to 0.725 LHV assumed in our previous study. US DOEs current
2001 baseline (at peak power) is 0.76 [7]. Some reformers under development are
claimed to have higher efficiencies but, according to a Ford authority quoted by DeCicco
[8], Effective reformers exist only in the laboratory.
A third source of loss in FCSs is the energy needed for FCS auxiliaries, primarily
electrically-driven pumps and blowers for water, air, and heat management. The single
largest load is for an air compressor to deliver air to the cathode compartments of the
stack; some of the air compressor load can be offset by an expander powered by the
cathode exhaust gas. In FCSs fueled by gasoline reformate, the air compressor must also
deliver air to the fuel processor for reaction with gasoline and recycled purged hydrogen
to provide reforming heat.
Table 5 shows our assumptions about total net requirements (after taking credit
for the expander) for auxiliary power expressed as a fraction of stack gross power. As in
the case of fuel processors, data are sparse at low levels of stack power output, and future
estimates are disparate, e.g. [8]. There are uncertainties about potential advances in
6
Our previous projections for FCS unit weights still look optimistic but achievable
and we have not changed them. For example, our estimate of 2.9 kg/kW for the
hydrogen-fueled FCS compares to the 3.1 target for the FreedomCAR [9]. Our estimate
of 4.8 kg/kW for gasoline FCS compares to ADLs [7] estimate of about 11 for 2001
technology and their long-term projection of 3.5 for systems based on an extremely
efficient stack which reduces weight not only in the stack but throughout the FCSs.
Overall System Efficiency
The losses enumerated above can be combined to give overall FCS system
efficiencies. Losses (and regenerative gains) downstream of the stack, in the electrical
traction system and controls, are excluded.
Overall efficiencies are listed in Table 7 under the heading Components. We
use the term components because the numbers shown combine the efficiencies (or
losses) of the individual FCS components listed in Tables 3 to 5 with no allowance for
performance degradation of those components due to design compromises needed to
obtain the best combination of important characteristics of the total powerplant in the
vehicle.
Examples of such compromisesoften to reduce cost, weight, or space or to
provide for warmup or transientswould be lower stack efficiency due to smaller stack
area, lower processor efficiency due to simpler but less-effective processor heat
management, or lower hydrogen utilization through changed stack design and operation.
Lacking any specific way to estimate these losses in a total integrated system, we simply
assumed an increase of 5% in the losses in each component. That is, the column
Integrated in Table 7 shows overall FCS efficiencies based on the component
efficiencies assumed in the Components column but additionally assuming: a) in the
stack, unit cell voltage is reduced 5% (from, say, 0.8 V to 0.76 V) at any given power
density, b) auxiliary power requirements are increased 5% (from, say, 10% of net output
to 10.5%) at any given power, and c) all efficiencies in the reformer are decreased 5%
(from, say, an efficiency of 0.80 to 0.76). We did not change hydrogen utilization; it
remained at 85%. These assumed losses due to integration result in significant increases
in fuel consumption relative to the component losses for the fuel cell vehicles
evaluated. Consumption of on-board fuel per vehicle km traveled increases about 9 to
23% depending on the driving cycle, fuel, and hybridization.
On-the-Road Results
Table 8 lists the assumed characteristics and the on-the-road and life-cycle energy
consumptions and GHG emissions of all the ICE vehicles we assessed. Table 9 does the
same for all the FC vehicles.
Some of the results from Tables 8 and 9 are displayed in Figure 1 for the
combined 55% urban/45% highway US Federal Test Procedure driving cycles. All of the
tank-to-wheels fuel consumptions are compared on a relative scale where 100 is defined
as the consumption of an assumed baseline cara gasoline-engine non-hybrid car
with low-cost evolutionary improvements in engine, transmission, weight, and drag
8
assumed to take place by 2020. The projected on-board fuel consumption of the baseline
car in the 55/45 driving cycle is 5.4 l gasoline/100 km which is equivalent to 43 miles per
gallon or 1.75 MJ (LHV)/km. The 2001 predecessor* of the baseline car had a fuel
consumption of 7.7 l/100 km (30.6 mpg) or 2.48 MJ (LHV)/km.
The bar for each of the fuel cell vehicles in Figures 1-3 has a shaded area and a
hatched area. The shaded area indicates the fuel consumption based on assuming that
each of the components of the FCS can operate as efficiently as shown in Tables 3 to 5
with an overall FCS efficiency shown in the Components columns of Table 7. The
hatched area shows the additional fuel consumption due to efficiency losses through
integration as summarized in the Integrated columns of Table 7.
In comparing different vehicles, modest differences are not meaningful because of
uncertainties in the results. We have not tried to quantify those uncertainties but some
sense of their magnitude can be gotten from two recent studies [12] [13] by General
Motors on ICE and FCS engines with hybrid and non-hybrid powertrains in a full-size
pickup truck and an Opel minivan using technologies that are expected to be
implemented or can be made technically available. GM projected median
consumptions of on-board fuel, with consumption equally likely to be above or below the
median. They also reported uncertainties defined as 20% boundslevels of fuel
consumption such that consumption has a 20% likelihood of being higher than the higher
bound and a 20% likelihood of being lower than the lower bound. These 20% bounds
varied with technology, but were about 20% above and below the median fuel
consumption.
Life-Cycle Results
In order to estimate life-cycle energy consumption, additions of energy use for the
fuel and vehicle manufacturing cycles were made to the tank-to-wheels estimates as
shown in the last rows of Tables 8 and 9. Estimates of life-cycle GHG emissions were
made similarly. For GHG emissions, the only GHGs considered were CO2 and methane
from natural gas leakage; gC(eq) is equal to the carbon in the CO2 released plus the
carbon in a mass of CO2 equal to 21 times the mass of methane leaked.
During the fuel cycle, gasoline and diesel fuels were assumed to be refined from
crude petroleum and would have modest improvements in quality over the next 20 years.
Hydrogen was assumed to be produced by the reforming of natural gas at local filling
stations, and compressed to about 350 atmospheres for charging vehicle tanks. Energy
consumptions during the manufacturing and distribution of these fuels were calculated to
include energy from all sources required to produce and deliver the fuels to vehicle tanks.
GHG emissions were calculated similarly. Details can be found in [1]. For each
MJ(LHV) of energy delivered to the vehicle fuel tank, energy consumption and GHG
emissions during the fuel cycle were 0.211 MJ and 4.9 gC(eq) respectively for gasoline,
0.139 MJ and 3.3 gC(eq) respectively for diesel fuel, and 0.77 MJ and 36 gC(eq)
respectively for hydrogen.
*
This 2001 predecessor differs somewhat from the current vehicle (1996) predecessor cited in [1],
reflecting advances in current technology during the past several years.
For vehicle manufacturing (which also includes all materials, assembly, and
distribution), we assumed, as in our previous report [1], intensive use of recycled
materials (95% of all metals and 50% of glass and plastics) in manufacturing, and that
manufacturing energy and GHGs were prorated over 300,000 km (vehicle life of 15 years
driven 20,000 km/year). These manufacturing additions for the vehicles assessed ranged
from 0.25 to 0.33 MJ/km in energy consumed and about 4.8 to 6.3 gC(eq)/km of GHGs
released. The numbers are the numbers used in [1] for the same vehicle technologies but
with small adjustments for changes in vehicle mass.
The life-cycle results are shown for energy in Figure 2 and for GHGs in Figure 3.
On a life-cycle basis, both energy consumption and GHG releases are similar for two
hybrid vehicles: diesel ICE and hydrogen FC. The gasoline ICE and FC hybrids appear
to be not quite as efficient but, considering the uncertainties of the results, not
significantly different from the two other hybrids.
Both life-cycle energy use and GHG releases from all four of these hybrids are
between 52 and 65% of our 2020 baseline vehicle, and between 37 and 47% of our 2001
reference vehicle. Whether or not fuel cell vehicles can reach the levels of performance
assumed here, there are several different technical opportunities to develop light-duty
vehicles capable of major reductions in energy and GHGs from personal passenger
transportation.
Table 10 breaks down life-cycle energy and GHG totals into the shares
attributable to each of the three phases of the life cycle: operation of the vehicle on the
road, production and distribution of fuel, and manufacture of the vehicle including
embodied materials.
The largest single share of energy, ranging from 44 to 75% of the total, results
from vehicle operation. The largest single share of GHGs, from 65 to 74%, is also
attributable to operation except for hydrogen fuel where the fuel cycle accounts for about
80% of the total. Vehicle manufacturing increases its share of energy and GHGs for
vehicles with higher on-the-road fuel economies, up to about 21% and exceeding the fuel
cycle share in about half the 2020 vehicles.
The main driving force for hybrid vehicles is their greater fuel economy which
comes at the cost of higher initial price and complexity, and some performance
disadvantages noted previously. The extent of the advantage in fuel economy depends
importantly on the way in which the vehicle is driven with greatest hybrid advantages for
urban driving and smaller advantages for higher speed highway and US06 driving. The
differences are illustrated by Table 11 which lists each hybrids fuel consumption as a
percentage of the fuel consumption of the corresponding non-hybrid version for the
US06, urban, highway, and combined Federal driving cycles. As expected, hybrids also
improve the urban fuel economy of ICE vehicles, whose engines have lower efficiencies
at lower power (and speeds), more than they improve FC vehicles whose fuel cell stacks
have higher efficiencies at lower power.
10
The engineer in charge of fuel cells for Honda, a company that is now leasing hydrogen fuel cell cars in
the US, says that it will take at least 10 years to bring prices down to $100,000 [14].
12
References
1.
Weiss, Malcolm A., et al. On the Road in 2020: A life-cycle analysis of new
automobile technologies. Energy Laboratory Report # MIT EL 00-003,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, October 2000.
http://web.mit.edu/energylab/www
2.
3.
4.
Ballard Power Systems. Ballard Fuel Cell Power Module, Mark 900 Series, Mk
900 Polarization. Burnaby, BC, Canada, November 2001.
5.
6.
Thomas, D. E., et al. Societal Impacts of Fuel Options for Fuel Cell Vehicles.
Directed Technologies, Inc. SAE 982496. Presented at Society of Automotive
Engineers International Fall Fuels and Lubricants Meeting and Exposition, San
Francisco, California, October 19-22, 1998.
7.
Arthur D. Little, Inc. Cost Analysis of Fuel Cell System for Transportation, 2001
System Cost Estimate, Task 3 Report to: Department of Energy, Ref. 49739
SFAA No. DE-SCO2-98EE50526, August 2001.
8.
DeCicco, John M. Fuel Cell Vehicles: Technology, Market, and Policy Issues.
SAE Research Report RR-010, November 2001.
9.
10. Arthur D. Little, Inc. Guidance for Transportation Technologies: Fuel Choice for
Fuel Cell Vehicles, Main Report, Phase II Final Report to DOE, 35340-00,
December 14, 2001.
11. Arthur D. Little, Inc. Guidance for Transportation Technologies: Fuel Choice for
Fuel Cell Vehicles, ADL Phase II Results Comparison to MIT Study, Revised
Phase 3 Deliverable to DOE, 75111-00, February 26, 2002.
13
12. General Motors Corporation, et al. Well-to-Wheel Energy Use and Greenhouse
Gas Emissions of Advanced Fuel/Vehicle SystemsNorth American Analysis.
Volume 2. http://www.transportation.anl.gov, June 2001.
13. L-B-Systemtechnik GmbH. GM Well-to-Wheel Analysis of Energy Use and
Greenhouse Gas Emissions of Advanced Fuel/Vehicle SystemsA European
Study. Report plus annexes: http://www.lbst.de/gm-wtw , 27 September 2002.
14.
Business Week, Fuel Cells: Japans Carmakers are Flooring It, p. 50, December
23, 2002.
14
Propulsion System
Gasoline ICE
Description
Advanced SI engine and auto-clutch transmission
Diesel ICE
Diesel ICE hybrid
Hydrogen FC
Hydrogen FC hybrid
Gasoline FC
Gasoline FC hybrid
15
Driving
Cycle
Urban
Description
The US FTP 75 cycle, which describes city driving
Highway
US06
Combined
Fuel consumption calculated for 55% of total as urban driving and 45% as
highway
16
100% H2
1.05
40% H2
(reformate)
1.03
25
0.94
0.92
50
0.90
0.88
100
0.87
0.84
200
0.84
0.81
400
0.79
0.75
600
0.75
0.71
800
0.72
0.67
1000
0.68
0.61
1050
--
0.60
1200
0.63
--
1300
0.60
--
17
Efficiency
LHVH2 Out/LHVGasoline In
This Study
0.725
0.60
0.725
0.73
10
0.725
0.79
20
0.725
0.81
30
0.725
0.81
100 (Peak)
0.725
0.81
18
This Study
5
10
15
15
15
12
20
15
10
30
15
10
100 (Peak)
15
10
19
Source [Reference]
Gasoline Reformate
$kW
kg/kW
60
2.9
80
4.8
DOE [7]
28
1.8
45
FreedomCAR [9]
30*
3.1*
30
--
ADL [11]
105
--
130
3.5
20
Net Output
Energy, %
of Peak
Components
Integrated
Components
Integrated
76
71
46
42
10
75
71
50
45
20
74
70
49
44
40
69
65
46
42
60
65
61
44
39
80
61
58
41
37
100
53
50
36
33
21
2001
2020
Diesel
2020
2020
Reference
Baseline
Advanced
Hybrid
Advanced
Hybrid
Mass (kg)
Body & Chassis
Propulsion System (3)
Total (Incl. 136 kg payload)
930
392
1458
845
264
1245
746
252
1134
750
269
1155
757
293
1186
758
297
1191
Vehicle Characteristics
Rolling Res. Coeff
Drag Coeff.
2
Frontal Area (m )
Power for Auxiliaries (W)
0.009
0.33
2.0
700
0.008
0.27
1.8
1000
0.006
0.22
1.8
1000
0.006
0.22
1.8
1000
0.006
0.22
1.8
1000
0.006
0.22
1.8
1000
2.50
38
165
110
1.79
41
124
93
1.65
41
124
85
1.11
41
124
58
29
1.75
51
153
89
1.16
51
153
59
30
2.82
2.06
2.81
2.48
30.6
141
2.00
1.45
1.94
1.75
43.2
100
1.78
1.25
1.67
1.54
49.2
88
1.20
0.91
1.49
1.07
70.7
61
1.53
1.04
1.39
1.30
58.1
74
1.03
0.78
1.29
0.92
82.5
52
2.47
0.52
0.29
3.28
138
1.75
0.37
0.25
2.37
100
1.55
0.32
0.25
2.12
89
1.07
0.22
0.26
1.55
65
1.31
0.18
0.26
1.75
74
0.92
0.13
0.26
1.31
55
48.5
12.1
5.5
66.1
138
34.4
8.6
4.8
47.8
100
30.2
7.6
4.8
42.6
89
21.0
5.2
5.0
31.2
65
27.1
4.3
5.0
36.4
76
19.1
3.0
5.1
27.2
57
Engine
Displacement (L)
Indicated Eff. (%)
Frictional ME Pressure (kPa)
Max. Engine Power (kW)
Max. Motor Power (kW)
Notes: (1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(9)
22
Nonhybrid
Comp.
Hydrogen
Nonhybrid
Hybrid
Integrated
Comp.
Hybrid
Integrated
Nonhybrid
Comp.
Gasoline
Nonhybrid
Hybrid
Integrated
Comp.
Hybrid
Integrated
Mass (kg)
Body & Chassis
Propulsion System (3)
Total (Incl. 136 kg payload)
776
465
1377
780
479
1395
752
372
1260
754
378
1268
821
638
1595
822
640
1598
775
460
1371
776
463
1375
Vehicle Characteristics
Rolling Res. Coeff
Drag Coeff.
Frontal Area (m2)
Power for Auxiliaries (W)
0.006
0.22
1.8
1000
0.006
0.22
1.8
1000
0.006
0.22
1.8
1000
0.006
0.22
1.8
1000
0.006
0.22
1.8
1000
0.006
0.22
1.8
1000
0.006
0.22
1.8
1000
0.006
0.22
1.8
1000
Propulsion System
Max. Net Stack Power (kW)
Max. Motor Power (kW)
103
103
105
105
63
95
63
95
120
120
120
120
69
103
69
103
0.75
0.52
0.92
0.65
117.3
37
0.82
0.57
1.00
0.71
106.5
41
0.60
0.47
0.78
0.54
140.3
31
0.66
0.51
0.87
0.59
128.1
34
1.29
0.85
1.51
1.10
69.2
62
1.56
1.03
1.83
1.32
57.4
75
0.96
0.73
1.27
0.86
88.4
49
1.16
0.88
1.56
1.04
73.1
59
0.65
0.50
0.31
1.46
61
0.71
0.55
0.32
1.58
66
0.54
0.42
0.28
1.24
52
0.59
0.46
0.28
1.33
56
1.10
0.23
0.33
1.66
70
1.32
0.28
0.33
1.93
81
0.86
0.18
0.28
1.32
56
1.04
0.22
0.28
1.54
65
0
23.3
5.8
29.1
61
0
25.6
5.9
31.5
66
0
19.4
5.3
24.7
52
0
21.3
5.3
26.6
56
21.5
5.4
6.2
33.1
69
26.0
6.5
6.3
38.6
81
16.8
4.2
5.4
26.4
55
20.3
5.1
5.4
30.8
64
Notes: (1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(9)
23
GHG, % of Total
Operation
Fuel
Cycle
Vehicle
Mfg.
Operation
Fuel
Cycle
Vehicle
Mfg.
2001 Reference
2020 Baseline
75
74
16
15
9
11
74
71
18
18
8
11
Gasoline ICE
Gasoline ICE Hybrid
73
69
15
14
12
17
72
67
18
17
10
16
Diesel ICE
Diesel ICE Hybrid
75
70
10
10
15
20
74
70
12
11
14
19
Hydrogen FC
Hydrogen FC Hybrid
45
44
34
35
21
21
0
0
81
79
19
21
Gasoline FC
Gasoline FC Hybrid
67
66
14
14
19
20
66
65
16
16
18
19
Note:
Percentages for FCs are averages for Component and Integrated systems. Neither
system varies more than about 1% from average. See Tables 8 & 9.
24
Vehicle
Gasoline ICE
Driving Cycle
Combined
Urban
Highway
US06
69
67
73
89
Diesel ICE
71
67
75
93
Hydrogen FC*
83
80
90
86
Gasoline FC*
78
74
86
85
25
100
100
Gasoline ICE
88
88
61
61
Diesel ICE
77
74
53
52
Hydrogen FC
--
37/41*
Hydrogen FC Hybrid
46
31/34*
Gasoline FC
--
62/75*
Gasoline FC Hybrid
86**
49/59*
* Components/Integrated
** Corrected
26
141
2020 BASELINE
100
GASOLINE ICE
88
61
DIESEL ICE
74
52
HYDROGEN FC
37/41
HYDROGEN FC HYBRID
31/34
GASOLINE FC
62/75
GASOLINE FC HYBRID
49/59
0
20
40
27
60
80
100
137
2020 BASELINE
100
GASOLINE ICE
88
64
DIESEL ICE
75
56
HYDROGEN FC
61/66
HYDROGEN FC HYBRID
52/56
GASOLINE FC
70/81
GASOLINE FC HYBRID
56/65
0
20
40
28
60
80
100
137
2020 BASELINE
100
GASOLINE ICE
88
64
DIESEL ICE
75
56
HYDROGEN FC
61/66
HYDROGEN FC HYBRID
52/56
GASOLINE FC
69/81
GASOLINE FC HYBRID
55/64
0
20
40
29
60
80