They’ve realized it’s an impossible task. Even if they figure out how to not leak it everywhere and not store it at immense pressures hydrogen embrittlement is probably an insurmountable challenge.
Is hydrogen embrittlement really the biggest issue? I think that’s more surmountable than the problem with hydrogen availability, storage, and transport.
Seems like you could use stainless, limit the number of parts that touch the hydrogen, limit the fatigue stress they see, and recycle them every now and then just like you’d need to do with a battery. Am I missing something?
Toyota is one of the brands from which I would consider buying an EV.
Are Toyota still pursuing hydrogen, or are they mostly all in on batteries now?
They’ve realized it’s an impossible task. Even if they figure out how to not leak it everywhere and not store it at immense pressures hydrogen embrittlement is probably an insurmountable challenge.
Is hydrogen embrittlement really the biggest issue? I think that’s more surmountable than the problem with hydrogen availability, storage, and transport. Seems like you could use stainless, limit the number of parts that touch the hydrogen, limit the fatigue stress they see, and recycle them every now and then just like you’d need to do with a battery. Am I missing something?
In the US? They still ride on the ICE bandwagon.
https://insideevs.com/news/752581/gm-toyota-support-bill-weaken-epa-emissions/
Not sure about development directions, but they currently have regular hybrids, plug in hybrids, battery EVs, hydrogen EVs…
I don’t think the infrastructure is there yet for hydrogen to be viable, so I don’t really consider those.
Before the hydrogen infrastructure is there, you’ll have battery chargers in every parking spot.