| A highly efficient
low-cost hydrogen combustion engine and fuel tank is to be developed by
the University of Melbourne and industry collaborators Ford Australia and
Haskel Australia.
The $3 million project is supported
by a $1.2m State Government grant from the Energy Technology Innovation
Strategy (ETIS) in the Department of Primary Industries.
Project leader Dr Michael Brear (Mechanical
and Manufacturing Engineering, University of Mel-bourne) says the aim of
the project is to help make hydrogen “a real alternative to fuels that
emit carbon dioxide”.
“Ultimately this will open up a whole
new market for not previously developed low-cost fuel efficient hydrogen-powered
vehicles,” he says.
The University has conducted research
into advanced, hydrogen-powered engines under the leadership of Professor
Harry Watson (Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering) for well over a
decade.
The hydrogen engine research – for
the past five years a cross Faculty project – brings together the expertise
of Dr Brear, Dr Chris Manzie and Professor Harry Watson (Mechanical and
Manufacturing Engineering), Professor Will Ducker (Chemical and Biomolecular
Engineering) and Professor Dragan Nesic (Electrical and Electronic Engineering).
Dr Brear says a goal of the newly
funded project is to build a Victorian-manufactured engine that should
achieve the world’s highest efficiency for a hydrogen-fuelled internal
combustion engine.
He says hydrogen is seen as a transport
fuel of the future because its reaction with air does not produce carbon
dioxide, a major cause of climate change.
Many proposed hydrogen fuelled vehicles,
however, are viewed as excessively expensive and impractical due to limited
compression and storage capacity.
“Existing storage methods such as
pressurisation of hydrogen to 350-700 atmospheres, are excessively large,
very heavy or unaffordable and do not show a clear path to meeting automotive
requirements.
“We will investigate a novel approach
to high density storage of hydrogen at pressures that allow use of conventional
storage equipment.”
He says much of the research will
be conducted within the University’s recently formed collaboration with
Ford – the Advanced Centre for Automotive Research and Testing (ACART)
– on both the University and Ford premises.
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