|
Archives
Fuel Cells Deliver Electricity and Hot Water
HIRATSUKA, JAPA (AP) - Masanori Naruse jogs every day, collects miniature
cars and feeds birds in his backyard, but he’s proudest of the way his
home and 2,200 others in Japan get electricity and heat water - with power
generated
by a hydrogen fuel cell.
The technology - which draws energy from the chemical reaction when hydrogen
combines with oxygen to form water - is more commonly seen in futuristic cars
with tanks of hydrogen instead of gasoline, whose combustion is a key culprit
in pollution and global warming.
Developers say fuel cells for homes produce one-third less of the pollution
that causes global warming than conventional electricity generation does.
“
I was a bit worried in the beginning whether it was going to inconvenience my
family or I wouldn’t be able to take a bath,” said the 45-year-old
Japanese businessman, who lives with his wife, Tomoko, and two children, 12
and 9. But, as head of a construction company, he was naturally interested
in new
technology for homes.
Tomoko Naruse, 40, initially worried the thing would explode, given all she
had heard about the dangers of hydrogen.
“
Actually, you forget it’s even there,” her husband said.
Their plain gray fuel cell is about the size of a suitcase and sits just
outside their door next to a tank that turns out to be a water heater. In the
process
of producing electricity, the fuel cell gives off enough warmth to heat water
for the home.
The oxygen that the fuel cell uses comes from the air. The hydrogen is extracted
from natural gas by a device called a reformer in the same box as the fuel
cell. But a byproduct of that process is poisonous carbon monoxide. So another
machine
in the gray box adds oxygen to the carbon monoxide to create carbon dioxide,
which - though it contributes to global warming - is not poisonous.
The entire process produces less greenhouse gas per watt than traditional
generation. And no energy is wasted transporting the electricity where it’s actually
going to be used.
“
There are not any real show-stoppers for this technology being used in the U.S.,” said
electrical engineering professor Roger Dougal at the University of South Carolina.
Dougal said fuel cells are no more hazardous than any stove or water heater.
Their major drawback is cost.
“
Ultimately I expect that some fraction of homes will use this technology, but
it will be a very long time before a sizable fraction does,” he said
in an e-mail.
Naruse is paying 1 million yen (US$9,500) for a 10-year lease on a test fuel
cell for his home southwest of Tokyo from Matsushita Electric Industrial Co.
Matsushita, which sells Panasonic brand products, plans to offer fuel cells
commercially in 2009.
Other Japanese companies working on fuel cells for homes include Toyota Motor
Corp., which is developing fuel-cell vehicles, and electronics maker Toshiba
Corp. Automaker Honda Motor Co. is working with Plug Power Inc., a fuel cell
company in the U.S., to test a home fuel cell generator that also provides
hydrogen as fuel for fuel cell vehicles.
Honda hopes domestic use for fuel cell generators will help make fuel cell
vehicles become more widespread because owners can refuel at home. It plans
to start marketing
the FCX Clarity fuel cell vehicle this year in California; it will lease for
about US$600 a month.
Fuel cells are expensive in part because they don’t last very long.
The latest model from Matsushita, for example, lasts about three years.
But the technology is improving. Matsushita says the savings from using fuel
cell-generated power will vary by household and climate, but it promises a
cost drop of about 5,000 yen (US$50) a month.
Naruse’s family - with three TV sets, a dishwasher, clothes washer,
dryer, personal computer and air conditioner - saves about 10,000 yen (US$95)
a month.
At the same time, conventionally generated electricity remains available to
them should the power generated by their fuel cell run low.
The Japanese government is so bullish on the technology it has earmarked
32.4 billion yen (US$310 million) a year for fuel cell development and plans
for
10 million homes - about one-fourth of Japanese households - to be powered
by fuel
cells by 2020.
Professor Bruce Rittman, director for the Center for Environmental Biotechnology
at Arizona State University, says the biggest benefit of fuel cell technology
is that it emits only water - when there’s a clean source of hydrogen.
Archives
|