Hydrogen Fuel Cell Vehicles (FCEVs)
What is a hydrogen fuel cell vehicle?
While conventional electric car sales are starting to boom, many manufacturers are working away on another way of running a car – hydrogen fuel-cell technology. Hydrogen fuel cell vehicles, also known as Fuel Cell Electric Vehicles (FCEVs), are another type of electric car and have a fuel cell stack which uses hydrogen to produce electricity which then powers the wheels of the vehicle. There is no internal combustion engine in a FCEV. The fuel cell is an electrochemical device similar to a battery, but unlike a battery it does not need recharging and will continue to generate power as long as it is fed with a supply of hydrogen. Fuel cells produce electricity and heat with just water produced at the tailpipe.
Unlike battery-powered vehicles, hydrogen fuel cell vehicles are refuelled at a filling station in a similar way to vehicles with a petrol or diesel engine. The FCEVs on the market have a range of around 400 miles. They take just three to five minutes to refuel and an current network of 15 hydrogen filling stations in the UK to support with many more to open in the coming years.
Pros: Fuel cell vehicles produce their own electricity using a chemical reaction, which is used to drive the car. These take a few minutes to refuel, offer hundreds of miles of range and emit only water vapour from the tailpipe. Hydrogen is an abundant fuel which can be produced using renewable energy.
Cons: Hydrogen fuel cells are already an established technology, but this is a relatively new sector for the automotive industry. As such, the network of hydrogen stations is limited as they are expensive to build and currently only a small number of vehicles are available in the UK. But with an influx of investment and new models on the way over the next few years.