7.8.2001
GM Unveils Fuel Cell Prototype with On-Board
Gasoline Processor
The development team at GAPC (GM and Opel's joint Global Alternative Propulsion
Center) has achieved a further success on the way to producing a marketable
fuel cell vehicle. Yesterday, at an automotive management conference in
Traverse City near Detroit, Michigan, the US car manufacturer presented
the world's first gasoline fuel processor for fuel cell propulsion, packaged
in a Chevrolet S pick-up truck. The Gen III processor extracts hydrogen
from the fossil fuel to feed the fuel cell stack. The prototype features
an optimized fuel cell stack, which, in conjunction with the processor,
generates 25 percent more power, is far more compact and weighs half as
much as its predecessor. Alternative propulsion specialists at GAPC regard
on-board gasoline powered fuel cells as an interim strategy until an effective
hydrogen infrastructure is in place.
Apart from the use of the fuel cell technology in vehicles, General Motors
also showed possibilities for its stationary use: In Traverse City, Larry
Burns, GM Vice President for research and development and product planning,
presented the prototype of a stationary fuel cell generator which would
be suitable, for example, for businesses, office complexes, hospitals
and possibly even for home owners. The stationary unit is capable of running
on natural gas, methane or gasoline and incorporates the same fuel processor
and stack technology used on experimental vehicles to convert gasoline
into a high-quality stream of hydrogen that powers the fuel cell.
Gen III Gasoline Processor: Less Space Needed, Quicker Start-Up
Compared with the first purely stationary unit shown in Fall 2000, the
development team has made the new mobile Gen III gasoline processor 300
percent smaller, without sacrificing efficiency. The on-board processor,
which was also developed in cooperation with Exxon Mobil, has a much shorter
warm-up time than its predecessor, taking just three minutes to start
instead of the previous 12 to 15. The Gen III has a peak efficiency of
80 percent. The hydrogen produced by the gasoline processor reacts in
the fuel cell with oxygen, generating the electricity that powers an electric
motor. This breakthrough with gasoline reforming is key to the future
market launch of fuel cell vehicles, which have virtually no pollutant
emissions and comparatively low CO2 emissions. It makes it possible to
use the same filling station infrastructure as for cars with a combustion
engine. "Through this new development, fuel cell technology could
become a marketable proposition before the end of the decade", said
Larry Burns at
the Conference.
The fuel cell unit used in the prototype based on the Chevrolet S10 pick-up
truck and developed by the specialists at the GAPC, generates 25 kW and
weighs 86 kilograms. This means it is only half the weight of its predecessor.
Because of its compactness and comparative lightness, it gets very close
to the demands of the engineers and car designers for optimum packaging,
and
should provide a significant boost to the development of future mobile
and stationary fuel cell units. Researchers at GAPC are testing a complete
gasoline processor fuel cell system that they believe can reach nearly
40 percent efficiency. For comparison, an optimally functioning diesel
engine manages around 33 percent and gasoline around 27 percent. Another
long-term goal is to develop a processor that can start in less than 20
seconds.
Fuel Cell Generator: Stationary Unit Opens up Fresh Perspectives
To illustrate just how versatile this new fuel cell technology is, GM
also unveiled in Traverse City a stationary fuel cell generator, also
developed by the GAPC specialists. At the heart of the environmentally
compatible, almost silent unit is a compact 5.3 kW stack. The same fuel
processor is used as in the mobile prototype, but it can extract the hydrogen
it needs to generate the electricity in the fuel cell not only from gasoline,
but also from methane or natural gas. The thinking behind it is that a
distribution network already exists in the United States for natural gas,
and most homes there are heated with it. Consequently, it would be an
easy transition for consumers.
The target group for the innovative unit includes businesses and public
amenities such as hospitals, but private homes with a natural gas connection
would also be ideal. GM's mini power plant, which has already proved itself
in a six-month trial at its research facility in Rochester, NY, could
serve as a backup generator for California subdivisions at risk of losing
power because of common blackouts or other bottlenecks in power supply.
GM Vice President, Larry Burns, thinks it possible that stationary units
could actually be on the market before the first fuel cell cars. This
would also be an advantage in terms of the technology's acceptance: "It
would get people comfortable with fuel cells so that by the time they
get introduced into automobiles, it won't be any big deal," says
Burns. To enable GM to begin marketing its small fuel cell generator as
soon as possible, the company intends to conclude a strategic alliance
with a partner.
Some 300 GAPC Employees are Working on Fuel Cell Technology
The engineers and scientists at the three GAPC facilities in Mainz-Kastel
(Germany), and Rochester (New York) and Warren (Michigan) in the United
States have set themselves a number of targets along the way to getting
the fuel cell technology ready for market. The 300 or so employees are
focusing their attention above all on greater durability of the systems,
further miniaturization, shortening the warm-up times, and reducing costs.
Fuel cells remain roughly ten times the cost needed for volume production.
But the cost has been cut considerably as GM has beefed up its research
and development efforts. Fifteen years ago, fuel cells were 1000 times
too expensive. Says Larry Burns: "Of course there's a long way
to go on several fronts. We are, after all, undertaking a historic change
in transportation and propulsion technology, but we're doing it the
right way, not trying to win a marathon in the second mile."