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Fuel Cells AND Batteries - Key Enablers for Zero Emission Vehicles -

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Presentation on theme: "Fuel Cells AND Batteries - Key Enablers for Zero Emission Vehicles -"— Presentation transcript:

1 Fuel Cells AND Batteries - Key Enablers for Zero Emission Vehicles -
Dr. Andreas Truckenbrodt AFCC Automotive Fuel Cell Cooperation Corp. Burnaby, Canada HFC 2009 June 1, 2009 AFCC: The Centre for Fuel Cell Stack Development for Daimler AG and Ford Motor Company

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3 Well-to-wheel CO2 potential

4 A diverse powertrain portfolio is required to cover all applications
Mobility Scenarios long distance cross country city Combustion Engine Hybridization Plug-In/Range Extender Battery Electric Fuel Cell Electric A diverse powertrain portfolio is required to cover all applications Klick

5 Both require infrastructure
Buildup of charging infrastructure Buildup H2-Infrastructure Investment [€] Investment [€] Public parking Commercial parking sites Private parking place (50%) Workplace Start invest for a minimal- infrastructure Number of vehicles Number of vehicles Investment for the charging infrastructure depends on vehicles sales H2-infrastructure requires start-up investments Overall costs for infrastructure are similar, though shape is a little different

6 Both are approaching near-term commercialization
F-Cell smart ed

7 Batteries – Promise and Challenges
High worldwide sentiment for EV/PHEV’s Batteries are making good progress technically and cost-wise But EV/PHEV’s are not farther ahead than fuel cells Many challenges remain May 27 announcement Chrysler/DOE: $448 million dollars to develop EV/PHEV – includes $365 million for a 365 vehicle test fleet Very few vehicles on the road in customer hands to prove market potential – many are just starting a test fleet phase

8 Fuel cell roadmap - The path to commercialization
Passenger Cars Lead application Generation 1 Technology Demonstration Generation 1 Technology Demonstration F-Cell Generation 1 Technology Demonstration Bus Sprinter Generation 2 Customer Acceptance 2004 Generation 2 Customer Acceptance B-Class F-Cell Generation 2 Customer Acceptance 2010 Generation 3 Cost Reduction I Future Generations 2013 Generation 4 Market Introduction Cost Reduction II Future Generations 201x Generation 5 High Volume Series Production 202y Fuel cell passenger cars will drive the volume

9 Gen 1: Technology demonstration From Necar 1 (1994) to F-Cell and Fuel Cell Buses (2004-2008)
JHFC Program Japan Sinergy EDB Project Singapore California Fuel Cell Partnership DoE Program USA Bus Project Beijing China Clean Energy Partnership Germany European Bus Project HyFLEET:CUTE Bus Project STEP Perth, Australia National Innovation Program H2 and Fuel Cell Germany European Zero Regio Project MBUSA MB NL Berlin DSEA MBJ Other end of timeline and technology: hydrogen and fuel cells Convinced that hydrogen and fuel cells are the ultimate solution but it will take a while until we see them replace the combustion engine propulsion It is extremely important to gain experience with real-life driving of fuel cell vehicles Proud to have the biggest fleet of fuel cell vehicles out there in real-life, customer testing programs 60 F-Cell Vehicles in customer operation 36 Buses (Citaro) in Europe, Australia, China 3 Sprinter Europe, USA ∼ km ∼ h ∼ km ∼ h ∼ km ∼ h 100 vehicles since 2004

10 Generation 2: Full customer acceptance
Fuel cells have also made huge progress Generation 1: Technology demonstration Generation 2: Full customer acceptance A-Class F-Cell B-Class F-Cell Looking at the B-Class F-Cell, which we will lease to customers starting next year, and comparing it to the current fuel cell vehicle generation of the A-Class F-Cell, you can see we have made huge progress in terms of size, power, fuel consumption and range. We are well along the way to meeting the requirements we have set for the serial production of fuel cell vehicles. In the B-Class we will have a stack lifetime of more than 2000 hours. The power of the electric motor will be 100 kW which gives us a maximum speed of 180km/h The reliability of the vehicle has been improved The range will be extended to 400 km, because of increased hydrogen storage capacity We will be able to start the vehicle from a temperature lower than 0° Celsius And we will use a lithium-ion battery instead a nickel-metal-hydrid battery to improve the overall efficiency of the car. 2004 – 2009 Worldwide 90 cars, 39 buses from 2009 Small series production Size - 40% Power +30% Consumption -30% Range +150% B-Class F-Cell: Higher stack lifetime Increased power (65kW 100kW) Higher reliability Longer range (160km 400km) Freeze start ability below 0°C Li-Ion battery [l/100km] [km] [l] [kW]

11 Status of fuel cell technology
Performance Safety Comfort Freeze start Range Reliability Longevity Package/weight Cost

12 Fuel cell achievements and challenges
Gen 3: Full scale running prototypes Gen 2: On road 2009

13 For fuel cells we know how to get the cost down
Goal: Competitive to the incumbent technologies Volume increase, economies of scale” (4-5x) Technology improvements (3x) Supplier development New, cooperative business models Magnitude of the task: factor 15

14 Cost driven development goals
Stack reduce Pt loading from 1 mg/cm2 to mg/cm2 develop improved cathode catalyst material and application technology without negative impact on lifetime reduce active stack area increase catalyst activity at full and part load (fuel economy !) while reducing Pt loading reduce bipolar plate cost through high volume manufacturing technologies (metal plates or carbon plates) improve membrane performance under dry and hot conditions to accommodate reduced/eliminated humidifier system concept improve unit cell/ flow field concept to accommodate reduced/eliminated hydrogen recirculation system concept System reduce/eliminate humidifier reduce/eliminate hydrogen recirculation loop reduce component cost (compressor, sensors, valves, tank, power electronics etc.) cost per-formance life- time

15 Solve joint problems jointly
Our industry does not need proprietary solutions to every problem As the cost of these solutions gets higher and higher, no one company can afford to develop all of them Nor will our customers pay the price tag for a custom solution…….to a generic problem The path to success in the last century probably is not going to be the path to success in this one. This drives us toward collaboration with other automakers and suppliers on the development of the cornerstone technologies of our collective future.

16 … and we'll always manage brand differentiation …

17 All stakeholders are in charge !
Automotive Industry Fuels/Energy Industry clean and efficient reliable affordable improved conv. fuels alternative fuels infrastructure If everybody plays a long, we can move a lot. It‘s not the automotive industry alone, but it‘s us together – hand in hand – with other partners. Nonetheless, we have to focus on what we can do ourselves. And I want to show you, that we CAN do quite a lot – our achievements so far serve as a proof Customer Public Institutions choice of vehicle driving behaviour "feel comfortable" relevant framework incentives research

18 Key Messages It is “fuel cells AND batteries” Fuel cells work fine - #1 focus is now on cost reduction, and we know how to get there The strong commitment from the car manufacturers needs to be joined by the other stakeholders


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