IHS Inc. The Source for Critical Information and Insight
Automotive |  Change  

Go
 
 

DOE Seeks Applications to Fund Hydrogen Storage Engineering Center of Excellence

March 6, 2008 // Published as a news service by IHS

 
Tools for Engineers
IHS sells products and services designed to meet the needs of today's engineers. To learn more, and for a free quote, please complete the form below.
IHS Standards Expert - Standards DB
SAE Standards Collections
SAE Technical Documents
Ford Motor Co. Standards
General Motors Standards
HAYSTACK - Parts/logistics mgmt.
4DOnline - Component DB tools
TACTRAC - Obsolescence mgmt.
First Name:

Last Name:

Email address:
The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Hydrogen, Fuel Cells and Infrastructure Technologies Program within the Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE) seeks applications to fund one multidisciplinary Hydrogen Storage Engineering Center of Excellence (CoE) team.

This CoE team is designed to complement the work of existing independent projects and the three materials-based hydrogen storage CoEs (adsorbents, metal hydrides and chemical hydrogen storage materials) by researching and developing onboard vehicular hydrogen storage systems and components that will allow for a driving range of greater than 300 miles while meeting vehicular packaging, safety, cost and performance requirements, said the DOE.

The CoE will develop engineering, design and system models that address onboard subsystems including refueling, thermal management, hydrogen discharge and the storage-delivery interface.

The CoE will also design, construct, test, evaluate and decommission subscale prototypes based upon adsorbents, metal hydrides and chemical hydrogen storage materials.

The DOE will select one team and provide approximately $35 to $40 million over six years for this effort, subject to appropriations, under the authority of the Energy Policy Act of 2005, Public Law 109-58, in particular the Spark M. Matsunaga Hydrogen Act of 2005, Title VIII - Hydrogen.

Specific objectives of the new Hydrogen Storage Engineering CoE are to:

  1. Develop and use an understanding of storage system requirements for light-duty vehicles to design innovative components and systems with the potential to meet DOE performance and cost targets.
  2. Develop innovative onboard system concepts for materials-based storage technologies.
  3. Develop and test innovative concepts for storage subsystems and component designs.
  4. Develop engineering, design and system models, which address both onboard subsystems and the fuel cycle including refueling, transfer and separation of fresh and spent fuel for chemical approaches, hydrogen discharge profiles, thermal management and the storage-delivery interface.
  5. Design, fabricate and test subscale prototype components and systems for each material-based technology (adsorbents, metal hydrides and chemical hydrogen storage materials).

Source: U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE) Vehicle Technologies Program.

AUTOMOTIVE STANDARDS & REGULATIONS NEWS
November 16, 2009
UL to Release Safety Requirements for Electric Vehicle Cord Sets
Underwriters Laboratories (UL) released a set of safety requirements for indoor/outdoor cord sets for electric vehicles, which will comply with ... more
October 26, 2009
ASTM WK25280 to Outline Truth-in-Data Principle for Traffic Monitoring
ASTM International Committee E17 on Vehicle-Pavement Systems is developing ASTM WK25280 - Practice for Highway Traffic Monitoring Truth-in-Data. ... more
October 23, 2009
ISO 22179 Sets Requirements for Full Speed Range Adaptive Cruise Control
The International Organization for Standardization (ISO) approved ISO 22179:2009 - Intelligent transport systems - Full speed range adaptive ... more
October 23, 2009
EIB Approves Loans for Euro Automotive Fuel Efficiency, Safety
On Oct. 21, the European Investment Bank (EIB) approved additional loans to European-based car makers totaling €600 million. ... more
October 12, 2009
UL Requirements to Mitigate Hazards for Electric Vehicle Batteries
Underwriters Laboratories (UL) will release a set of requirements - UL Subject 2580 - for large batteries in electric vehicles. ... more
Show All..