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ENGR 101/HUM 200: Technology and Society

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Title: ENGR 101/HUM 200: Technology and Society


1
ENGR 101/HUM 200 Technology and Society
  • October 25, 2005

2
Agenda
  • The Hydrogen Economy
  • Innovative Designs (video segment)
  • Hand back exams

3
Hydrogen Fuel v. Hydrogen Economy
  • Changes in energy sources have broad economic
    consequences
  • Energy is a key input into our economy
  • The current worldwide economy is dominated by
    fossil fuels
  • Energy fuels economic growth
  • Infrastructure is shaped by energy needs
  • Energy is infrastructure

4
Replace or Enable?
  • Replacement technology
  • Replaces an existing product
  • Electric vs. gas light
  • New product must cost less
  • Enabling technology
  • Provides a new capability
  • Airplanes and flight
  • Cost not as important
  • Consider the technology for Make it Better

5
Fuel Cells Replace and Enable
  • Energy efficiency is about replacing a technology
  • Providing environmental protections (whether or
    not in response to regulations) is about enabling
    a technology

6
Hydrogen Replaces and Enables
  • If it increases efficiency of ICEs, that is
    replacement
  • If it creates a decentralized energy
    infrastructure, that is enabling

7
Hydrogen Economy
  • Network of three functional steps
  • Production
  • Storage
  • Use
  • But where does hydrogen come from?
  • Lots of it, but not in the right form for use as
    a fuel
  • Not just a fuel, but an infrastructure

8
Challenges Posed by H.E.
  • Competitive production
  • Distribution
  • Storage
  • Safety

9
Why Hydrogen?
  • Need replacement for fossil fuels
  • Energy independence, pricing, worldwide stores
  • Environmental regulations (Clean Air Act, CAs
    zero emission standards)
  • Hydrogen is viewed as clean, renewable energy
    source
  • Hydrogen is also an energy carrier for renewable
    energy sources (stores, moves, and delivers
    energy in a usable form to consumers)

10
Some economic drivers
  • Automobile manufacturers looking for good fuel
    match for fuel cell technology
  • Governor of California initiated Hydrogen Highway
    Project
  • 150-200 stations along state highways
  • 500K each
  • One step in chicken-egg dilemma

11
Where does hydrogen come from?
  • Introduction of hydrogen as an energy source for
    fuel cells doesnt necessarily mean no use of
    fossil fuels
  • Hydrogen is produced from
  • natural gas, coal, gasoline, methanol, or biomass
    through the application of heat (reforming)
  • from bacteria or algae through photosynthesis
  • using electricity or sunlight to split water
    into hydrogen and oxygen.

12
Fossil Fuels
  • Not renewable
  • Reserves will eventually run out
  • Some debate on when modes of extraction becoming
    more complex, more expensive
  • Prices are rising even now
  • By 2050, there will be a 50 increase in energy
    use worldwide
  • Population growth
  • Industrialization of developing countries

13
Current Energy Sources
  • Oil supplies 40 of the worlds energy needs
  • Oil accounts for 90 of energy used for
    transportation
  • Cars trucks produce 10 of carbon dioxide
    emissions in the US
  • Power plants produce more than 40 of carbon
    dioxide in US

14
Fuel Cells and Hydrogen
  • Hydrogen fuel should not be confused with fuel
    cell technology
  • In order to use hydrogen as a fuel, it still
    needs to be liberated from somewhere, and that
    takes energy
  • Hydrogen fuel can be used to power ICEs as well
    as fuel cells
  • Fuel cells are more efficient than either ICEs or
    batteries (can be constantly replenished open v
    closed system)
  • ICE standards of longevity 15 years or 170K
    miles
  • Current PEM (proton exchange membrane) fuel
    cells 2000 hours

15
Fuel Cells in development
  • Fuel cells as batteries for consumer electronics
  • Canons announcement 10/25 that it has developed
    fuel cells to replace conventional batteries for
    digital cameras and printers in 3 years
  • Have to find way to provide consumers with fuel

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21
Some work being done at UW
  • http//depts.washington.edu/fuelcell/Info/FAQ/FAQ.
    htm
  • http//faculty.washington.edu/stuve/uwess/uwess.ht
    m
  • http//faculty.washington.edu/cooperjs/Definitions
    /design_for_environment.htm
  • http//faculty.washington.edu/cooperjs/Definitions
    /life_cycle_assessment.htm
  • Life cycle assessment is a protocol to assess
    the environmental, economic, and social impacts
    of an industrial system

22
What Interrupts the Optimistic Narrative?
  • Hydrogen fuel burns clean but hydrogen fuel
    production is dirty
  • Hydrogen is not an energy source like oil, coal,
    wind or sun but an energy carrier like
    electricity or gasoline
  • But, the only byproduct from burning hydrogen in
    an ICE or a fuel cell is water

23
Likely Early Adopter Industries
  • For hydrogen as a fuel
  • Not cars
  • Difficulty manufacturing in advance of sufficient
    consumer demand
  • Fuel companies unlikely to invest in
    infrastructure (filling stations) till a critical
    mass of cars
  • For fuel cells
  • Battery replacements
  • Infrastructure elements that are looking for
    decentralization

24
Some Public Policy Issues
  • Infrastructure for developing countries
  • A hydrogen economy would democratize energy
    generation so that all nations can have equal
    access to the benefits of electricity. The
    Futurist
  • Values
  • Shift required for an energy policy that promotes
    energy independence based on diverse sources of
    cleaner energy, combined with tough emission
    standards, and conservation effort
  • Safety
  • Hindenberg misconception hydrogen fires not
    easily detectable (odorless, colorless gas)

25
Next class
  • Guest lecture Prof John Kramlich
  • Read The Diamond Age
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