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Going back a few posts, I note that hydrogen has been declared by an expert consensus uneconomic and unfeasible for domestic heating and urban transport. Precisely the uses for which it was put in every city 200 years ago, and currently in Orkney, respectively.
Fixed distance between termini means that you can start with just one or two refueling points, say London and Birmingham, with minimal environmental impact and speeds of 200+ mph. Hydrogen power offers a compromise between the fuel weight of a diesel generator and the cost and engineering limitations of overhead power lines.
The problem with nearly all green electricity is its unreliability. Given that the energy is free, it makes sense to find some means of storing it.
The hydrogen airlev train requires less infrastucture than a road but overhead wires are hugely expensive and require a lot of maintenance, and a track-powered maglev is even more complicated and capital-intensive. A battery maglev seems a bit like a low-flying elephant.
Accelerating the battery truck to running speed will consume 30% of the train's power
Kinetic energy recovery is significant at low speeds, so it enhances the performance of a 70 mph stop-start car, but at 200 mph or more continuous travel you are more concerned with aerodynamic drag - airplane speed increases with the square root of power - so there's not a lot to be gained by regenerative braking at the end of a 300 mile journey.
Quote from: alancalverd on 06/02/2022 15:36:40The problem with nearly all green electricity is its unreliability. Given that the energy is free, it makes sense to find some means of storing it.Yes, that is true for wind and solar. Not for geothermal or nuclear, both of which ought to be components of a carbon-neutral energy grid. With a well-considered mix of low-variability sources like those, and high variability sources like wind and solar combined with short and mid-term storage, you get a resilient, stable energy system.
Drag force = ½ρCDAV2 where ρ is air density, CD is the drag coefficient, A the effective area of the moving body and V its speed. Thus terminal speed ≈ k√(power) at subsonic speeds. Nothing to do with the mass of the battery, just the size and shape of the train.
It is true that a battery-powered train could be overall more energy-efficient than one powered by electrolytic hydrogen, but only before it moves. To deliver 8 MW for 3 hours (i.e to run a reasonable train from London to Aberdeen at 200 mph) a battery would have to weigh over 100 tonnes - about the weight of four carriages, not including the weight of the truck itself. Accelerating the battery truck to running speed will consume 30% of the train's power, so you will probably need to add another 20 tonnes or so. And you will need two battery trucks per train, one at each end of the track. This doesn't compare well with less than a tonne of hydrogen for the same trip. The only question is whether it should be oxidised in a fuel cell or a gas turbine to maximise power/weight ratio.
Adding 100 tonnes of batteries to the weight of the train means you need bigger motors to drive it, adding more weight, hence more batteries....it's the rocket problem. It is solvable, but rocketeers long ago decided that liquid fuel was the only practical solution. Kinetic energy recovery is significant at low speeds, so it enhances the performance of a 70 mph stop-start car, but at 200 mph or more continuous travel you are more concerned with aerodynamic drag - airplane speed increases with the square root of power - so there's not a lot to be gained by regenerative braking at the end of a 300 mile journey.
Then why did you say this?
Tesla Semi prototype has been demonstrated to work well.
So the 'reliability' of nuclear doesn't do you a lot of good in the end. You still need backup from something else. Wind and solar just need pumped hydroelectric storage. It's quite a lot of storage, but it is as nothing compared to the amount of storage nuclear power would need.
I pointed out that, like a plane and unlike a car, most of the energy expended by a high speed train is lost in friction and drag during the long cruise phase and is therefore unrecoverable.
If only we could take the battery off the train and connect it to the engine via the rails or wires or something...
A 100 tonne 8 MW battery is a burden, not an asset!
Why cars are different? Which one has the bigger drag coefficient? SUV or bullet train?
Hydrogen system is a bigger burden overall.
Which is why the capital and maintenance costs of high speed trains require public subsidy. HS2 costs £1,000,000 per meter to build .
Quote from: Bored chemist on 09/02/2022 08:50:18If only we could take the battery off the train and connect it to the engine via the rails or wires or something...Which is why the capital and maintenance costs of high speed trains require public subsidy. HS2 costs £1,000,000 per meter to build and god knows how much to maintain the track and wiring.
Cars start and stop frequently and don't exceed 70 mph. HS trains run for hours at a constant 200 mph. Drag depends on the square of speed, so even if a car and a train were the same size and shape, the train would dissipate 8 times as much unrecoverable power when cruising.