
Ammonia is our preferred hydrogen carrier
Anhydrous Ammonia is the only known long term sustainable liquid, high density, green renewable energy fuel. The concentration has been on renewable when the concentration should be on sustainability. Using food as a fuel when it results in starvation and massive soil depletion and a net loss of energy is not sustainable. To make ammonia you use nitrogen from the air and hydrogen from water and energy and when using the fuel in the billion internal combustion engines, heaters and fuel cells you return the nitrogen and water for endless recycling. The energy used to make the ammonia can be nuclear, solar, wind, geothermal, ocean temperate difference, waste and you get a fuel that can power cars, trucks, locomotives, ships, electrical generators for distributed power, and use slightly modified existing engines making them pollution free and green.
Ammonia is being produced, distributed and safely used by millions and being produced at well over 100 million tons per year so there are no bad surprises but there are many very good surprises in gradually replacing hydrocarbon fuels such a oil and gasoline that are polluting and causing global warming and sickness. . Ammonia is essentially non flammable and is readily obtained and handled in liquid form without need for expensive and complicated refrigeration technology. In addition, ammonia contains 1.7 times as much hydrogen as liquid hydrogen for a given volume. Compared to hydrogen, ammonia therefore offers significant advantages in cost and convenience as a vehicular fuel due to its higher density and its easier storage and distribution. Ammonia is produced and distributed world-wide in million of tons per year. Procedures for safe handling have been developed in every country. Facilities for storage and transport by barges, trucks and pipelines from producer to ultimate consumer are available throughout the world.
Therefore liquid anhydrous ammonia is an excellent storage medium for hydrogen even though the endothermic ammonia cracking results in some efficiency penalty. The fuel capacity per weight of ammonia is higher compared to methanol and the price per kW is lower.
A new ammonia-powered truck

The NH3car (NH3 is the chemical formula for ammonia) is a demonstration project of a University of Michigan graduate student in physics who is studying the use of ammonia as an alternative fuel. The only by-products or exhaust are water vapor and nitrogen gas.
"On the basis of either weight or volume, ammonia's the next best thing when liquid petroleum fuels can't be used,'' said Grannell, a University of Michigan doctoral student of applied physics. "I believe this is the only economically viable ... replacement for liquid petroleum fuels, especially for transportation use."
Ammonia Reduces NOX in Mercedes and
Honda Diesel Vehicles
How Mercedes-Benz BLUETEC Works--- Mercedes' new super-clean diesel uses ammonia in the Selective Catalytic Reduction (SCR) catalyst to reduce NOx.The ammonia is stored in the catalytic converter, and reduces the nitrogen oxides into harmless nitrogen when exhaust gases containing nitrogen oxides flow through the catalytic converter. The engine management system controls the injection of AdBlue in such a way that the ammonia reservoir of the SCR converter always contains some but never too much ammonia.
New Honda diesel NOx catalytic converter meets US Tier II Bin 5 emissions limits Honda Motor Co., Ltd., announced today it has developed a next-generation diesel engine that reduces exhaust gas emissions to a level equal to a petrol engine. Honda’s next-generation diesel engine employs a NOx catalytic converter that will enable sufficent reduction in NOx emissions to meet U.S. Tier II Bin 5 emissions requirements) when the new engine is launched in three years’ time. The catalytic converter features the world’s first system using the reductive reaction of ammonia generated within the catalytic converter to “detoxify” nitrogen oxide (NOx) by turning it into nitrogen (N2).
Ammonia Fuel—The Other Hydrogen Future
The Cutting Edge News By Larry Bruce, Joe McClintock and John Holbrook
America’s approach to the
transformational challenge of Peak Oil has resembled nothing so
much as a Keystone Kops two-reeler. Not since Jimmy Carter has
an administration demonstrated a commitment commensurate to the
challenge, perhaps because President Carter was sent packing
back to Georgia with his cardigans after an attempt to rouse
Americans from their blissful dreams of a future where Exxon and
Mobil would ensure that no one would have to line up for
gasoline ever again. Thirty years later, we are just one
Category Four hurricane in the wrong place or a Strait of Hormuz
terrorist attack away from waiting in long lines to buy fuel we
can no longer afford for the SUVs we no longer love. Recent
events in Nashville suggest that even imagined shortages will
have the same results. We need a rational approach to energy
transition, and nothing exemplifies the lack of a comprehensive
energy policy as much as the magical-time-machine thinking
involved in the promise of a "hydrogen future."
To appreciate this policy void, we have to clearly understand
where we are right now. Cheap and plentiful petroleum has
defined almost every aspect of our modern economy: from
automobile-dependent McMansion suburbs, to mega-box retailing of
cheap Asian consumer goods, to petrochemical-based agriculture,
we are addicted to the concept of a single energy source. For
the last century that single energy source has been
petroleum—light, sweet, cheap crude oil. Hydrogen offers the
hope of a single vehicle energy source, which is a key element
of its appeal. The reality is that we are faced with a
transition to a multi-source energy future.
The real problem in transitioning to a new comprehensive energy
system is a power source for individual transportation.
Electricity generation has many options, including coal
(cleaner—we hope), natural gas, hydropower, nuclear energy, and,
increasingly, renewable sources such as wind and solar. In the
case of transportation, the options for replacing gasoline and
diesel fuel are severely limited. Electric vehicles have a
limited range. Liquid fuels can be produced from coal although
the investment cost is high and this approach generates
significant carbon dioxide emissions. Plant-derived liquid fuels
such as ethanol and bio-diesel can be domestically produced and
offer the benefit of being carbon neutral when consumed, yet
what is less clear is the total cost and carbon balance when
fossil fuels are used in farming, transportation, and processing
these "clean" bio-fuels. In addition, the diversion of food
crops such as corn and soy beans to fuel production impacts the
world food supply and may lead to political unrest.
Gaseous fuels, mainly natural gas and hydrogen, are also
candidates for transportation fuels. Natural gas and hydrogen
may be stored in a vehicle as cryogenic liquids or as high
pressure gasses. The complexity and energy cost of cryogenic
liquids has made them unpopular in transportation applications,
so high pressure storage has been the choice. High pressure
storage requires a heavy, expensive container and does not
provide much driving range. Despite this, high pressure hydrogen
fueling stations are being built, and California has plans for a
Hydrogen Highway that will run the length of the state.
Now that America is awakening to the prospect that our energy
system is under fire and possibly nearing collapse, hydrogen is
being promoted as the magic bullet. It’s the clean, carbon-free
answer to the question, "What single energy source will replace
petroleum?" But hydrogen energy infrastructure is decades away,
a fact admitted by even its most vocal proponents, as they
attempt to address the key challenges of a fuel with an
extremely low volumetric energy density and the propensity to
escape every vessel and effort to contain it. Those promoting a
hydrogen future (a group which includes every major oil and coal
company) fail to mention that the most prevalent feedstock for
their "clean" fuel is natural gas or coal, or that the process
[what process?] generates massive amounts of carbon dioxide
which will need to be sequestered. So much for the promise of
clean hydrogen energy.
It may indeed be the case that pure hydrogen will be one of the
many solutions that can be harnessed to rescue us from our
current reliance on imported oil. There is much promise in
today’s research. But the technical challenges facing pure
hydrogen today in economic production, storage, and transport
put that piece of the puzzle years in the future—and we need
answers right now.
What if this vision of a distant hydrogen energy future ignores
a critical reality: that an alternative approach to hydrogen
fuel is available immediately; that with minimal modifications
we could convert the bulk of our gasoline and diesel internal
combustion engines to an existing hydrogen based fuel,
eliminating carbon emissions and reducing our dependence on
foreign oil; that a proven technology exists to produce this
hydrogen based fuel without carbon dioxide emissions; and that
new and more efficient synthesis is already in coming online?
What if we do not need to wait for the hydrogen future of the
year 2030? What if our hydrogen future is within our grasp right
now?
It is.
The one pollution free, hydrogen-based renewable fuel we could
begin using today on a large scale is anhydrous ammonia, one of
the most commonly synthesized chemical compounds on the planet.
Anhydrous ammonia is already used worldwide as fertilizer for
its nitrogen content, and delivered by a well-established and
safe infrastructure. Due to its hydrogen content, anhydrous
ammonia (NH3) can be used in both gas and diesel internal
combustion engines with minor modifications, can be used in
direct ammonia fuel cells, and can provide hydrogen feedstock
for standard hydrogen fuel cells.
Ammonia fuel is a more effective hydrogen fuel than pure
hydrogen. It is a molecule composed of one atom of nitrogen and
three atoms of hydrogen. It has similar physical characteristics
to propane: it is a gas at normal temperatures and atmospheric
pressure but becomes liquid at slightly higher pressure. NH3’s
ability to become a liquid at moderate pressure allows ammonia
to store considerably more hydrogen per unit volume than
compressed hydrogen, and 50 percent more than cryogenic liquid
hydrogen. Anhydrous ammonia delivers 4.5 times more energy per
liter than pure gaseous hydrogen at 5000 psi. In addition to
providing a practical means to store and transport hydrogen,
ammonia can be burned directly in internal combustion engines
and direct-ammonia fuel cells—today.
Ammonia fuel offers an easy solution to one of the greatest
challenges facing an energy system based on renewables. What do
you do when the wind doesn't blow and the sun doesn't shine?
Plans currently under discussion include pumped hydro or storing
compressed air in underground caverns to drive turbines. With
ammonia fuel synthesis equipment co-located with wind and solar
facilities, power produced in excess of grid demand can be used
to generate ammonia fuel, which can be easily stored on site.
When the wind fails or the sun goes down, that stored energy can
be harvested by using ammonia fuel to generate continuous,
reliable power that is completely carbon free.
Ammonia has been synthesized for nearly a century using the
Haber-Bosch process, which combines hydrogen and nitrogen.
Although the hydrogen for the process is normally derived by
reforming a fossil fuel, such as natural gas, hydrogen can also
be produced without using carbon based fossil fuels by the
electolytic splitting of water using any source of electricity,
including hydropower, wind and solar cell power, or nuclear
power. This is where the renewable angle comes in. There are
several "wind-to-ammonia" demonstration projects underway across
North America. These projects largely use "stranded" wind
resources (wind resources that are not near electric
transmission lines) to produce ammonia for use as fertilizer or
fuel. The goal is to refine the process so that, as the cost of
fossil fuel stock for ammonia such as natural gas increases,
renewable production of ammonia can be brought online rapidly to
replace it.
At the same time, improved technologies are coming on-line
including lower cost electrolyzers and an approach called
solid-state ammonia synthesis (SSAS), which makes ammonia
without making hydrogen as an interim step. In particular, SSAS
promises to reduce the electric energy required to produce
ammonia from water and air by 35 to 50 percent, and to lower the
capital costs as well. Using these advanced technologies,
ammonia can be produced from renewable and nuclear electric
power for a cost cheaper than today’s gasoline and diesel fuel,
and without a trace of greenhouse gases. Even with the existing
electrolyzer and Haber-Bosch process, ammonia is cost
competitive with gasoline retailing at prices above $3 per
gallon, and can only become more economically attractive as oil
prices rise and/or the cost of ammonia production falls due to
improving technology or economies of scale.
Ammonia has a long and successful history as a substitute for
petroleum based fuels. In 1935 the firm of Ammonia Casale, Ltd.
received a patent for a system to burn a mixture of ammonia and
hydrogen in internal combustion engines. During World War II,
because of a severe shortage of diesel fuel in Belgium,
municipal busses were operated using a mixture of coal gas and
ammonia which was readily available. The Department of Defense
also studied ammonia as a potential fuel in the 1960s on the
Energy Depot Program, since it could be manufactured from water,
air, and electricity. The concept was that a portable nuclear
reactor that could drive a generator to produce electricity and
ammonia, could be manufactured to fuel vehicles. The NASA/Air
Force X-15 Rocket Plane was powered by ammonia, and ammonia
fueled engines are in operation right now, demonstrating the
viability of this fuel source.
Of course, ammonia is not without its challenges. Ammonia is an
inhalation hazard and must be handled with respect. But, the
world ammonia industry produces and delivers 130 million tons a
year with an exemplary safety record. About 20 million tons of
ammonia is consumed in the U.S. annually, largely as fertilizer,
and delivered by truck, rail, barge, and 3,000 miles of
small-diameter, underground carbon steel pipeline in the U.S.
agricultural heartland. Ammonia is not classified as a flammable
liquid by the DOT, and does not have the fire and explosion
hazard of gasoline, natural gas, propane, or hydrogen. Although
hazardous when inhaled, it is lighter than air and disperses
into the atmosphere when released, and without residual harmful
effects. Ammonia is not a greenhouse gas, and does not attack
the ozone layer.
For ammonia to be in wide use as a transportation fuel, design
standards for on-board ammonia fuel tanks must be established as
well as procedures for ammonia transfer from storage to vehicle
tanks, however much of this work is already in place. Although
propane-powered personal vehicles are not a staple of the
American road, they are relatively common overseas, and the
technical challenges are almost identical. If an Australian can
pump propane into his utility vehicle and drive away, an
American can refuel with ammonia.
The best features of ammonia are those it shares with hydrogen:
it can be used both in internal combustion engines and in fuel
cells, it produces no greenhouse gasses on combustion, and it
can be produced from a wide variety of renewable energy
resources.
If hydrogen is the answer to the energy challenge of peak oil,
then there is absolutely no reason to wait. The better hydrogen
future is ready right now with proven technology, from
production and distribution to storage and engine modification.
An aggressive program to use wind and solar power to generate
this carbon-free fuel can create a sea of change in our energy
policy. Ammonia fuel is not the one single answer to peak oil,
because there is no single answer. But as an existing
implementable strategy to cut greenhouse gases, reduce reliance
on fossil fuels, and create new green collar jobs, ammonia is
the stepping stone to the hydrogen future that up until now
seemed decades away.
Potential Roles of Ammonia in a Hydrogen Economy
A Study of Issues Related to the Use Ammonia for On-Board Vehicular Hydrogen Storage
By George Thomas and George Parks
Comments on the above Department of Energy Study
Comments on Potential Roles of Ammonia in a Hydrogen Economy
By Peter J. Feibelman and Roland Stumpf (Sandia National Laboratories)