Road tunnels may have to be redesigned if the
hydrogen economy takes off.
Cars fuelled by hydrogen have been touted
for their potential to reduce carbon dioxide emissions. Now Yajue Wu of the University of Sheffield, UK, has built a computer simulation of a
hydrogen car crashing inside a
tunnel.
Unlike gasoline, which pools and ignites on the ground, escaping hydrogen would create a high-velocity "jet flame" stretching upwards for many metres. In a paper to appear in
Transportation Research C, Wu found that this 2000 °C flame would seriously damage tunnel ceiling structures and wreck fire sensors and sprinklers.
A spokesman for BMW says that in crash tests the fuel tank on its prototype hydrogen car has never been breached.