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BMW and NASA Conclude Hydrogen Tests

By Design World Staff | August 15, 2007

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BMW of North America and NASA announced the successful completion of an eight-week test period of the BMW Hydrogen 7 sedan.

The test period, which was initiated under a Space Act Agreement between NASA and BMW.

“We are very proud to have been able to offer this test period of the BMW Hydrogen 7 to NASA, an organization that truly is on the forefront of discovery and innovation and with whom we share a unique common goal: the use and ongoing research of liquid hydrogen solutions,” said Karl-Heinz Ziwica, Vice President of Engineering, BMW of North America.

nasabmw.jpg

“It is the high energy density of liquid hydrogen that allows the space shuttle to be accelerated into space. The same concept is used to power the BMW Hydrogen 7. Using hydrogen as a fuel can potentially reduce CO2 emissions by 90 percent. The BMW Hydrogen 7 is tangible proof that hydrogen-drive vehicles are a very viable option for the future of sustainable mobility, and we’re pleased that NASA was able to experience it first-hand.”   

During the test period, NASA personnel had full access to the fleet of BMW Hydrogen 7s, which run on a form of liquid hydrogen similar to what NASA uses in its shuttles.  During their time with NASA, the vehicles — which feature a dual combustion engine capable of running on liquid hydrogen or gasoline and shifting seamlessly between the two — were conveniently refueled using the space center’s liquid hydrogen fueling supply located on the space center’s premises.  

The BMW Hydrogen 7
The car comes equipped with an internal combustion engine capable of running on either liquid hydrogen or gasoline and is based on the BMW 760Li. The V12 cylinder engine delivers 260 hp; the top speed of the Hydrogen 7 is 143 mph and acceleration 0-60 mph is 9.2 sec. When driving in hydrogen mode, emissions of the BMW Hydrogen 7 are virtually nothing but water vapor. The car features a high-tech vacuum super-insulated hydrogen tank in which liquid hydrogen can be stored at the extremely low temperature of -423 ° Fahrenheit (-253 °Celsius) for a long period of time — the same insulating effect as a 17-meter-thick layer of Styrofoam.  One hundred BMW Hydrogen 7s have been built, and 25 are used in test programs in the US. The cars have already covered more than 1.3 million miles in test programs around the globe.

BMW Group
www.bmwgroupna.com

.: Design World :.


Filed Under: Aerospace + defense, Automotive, Materials • advanced

 

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