Fuel Cell electric vehicles
A fuel cell combines
hydrogen fuel and oxygen to produce electricity
used to power an electric motor that moves the
vehicle. The only exhaust is water. A number of
fuel cell powered electric vehicles are on the
roads worldwide, including passenger cars,
delivery trucks, buses and military vehicles.
Researchers are working to bring down fuel cell
and related component costs and to improve
durability to enable full commercialization.
California boasts the largest number of fuel
cell fleets, and there are demonstration
projects nationwide, including Washington,
DC.
Advantages of fuel cell electric vehicles:
- Zero tailpipe emissions (no CO2 or other pollutants)
- Higher energy efficiency than the internal combustion engine
- Regenerative braking captures and reuses braking energy
- Potential of near-zero well-to-wheel emissions when using renewable fuels to produce hydrogen
- Energy security: no dependence on petroleum
- Grid connection potential providing energy "on call" to the grid
Challenges:
- Cost reduction
- Increased realiability and durability
- Hydrogen generation, distribution, dispensing and onboard storage
- Availability and affordability of hydrogen refueling
- Codes and standards development
- Scalability for mass manufacture
- Consumer education
Check our list of vehicles to see which models are available now, or will be available in the future, for this technology.
See Also
>> Battery
electric vehicles
>> Extended-Range
electric vehicles
>> Plug-in
Hybrid electric vehicles
>>
Hybrid
electric vehicles
>> Medium/Heavy
duty vehicles
>> Neighborhood
electric vehicles
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