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At Florida State University in Tallahassee, they're trying to create the building of tomorrow with the feel of today,
(Phil Coale/Mike Groll/AP) |
Solar-hydrogen house in Florida
combines new, old
It may look like an out-of-place
throwback, but the Off-Grid, Zero Emissions Building
has a futuristic purpose.
By
Bill Kaczor | Associated Press Writer
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. - The elevated floor, tall
ceilings, steeply pitched roof and broad overhangs
are borrowed from the traditional “cracker house”
that relied on shade and air movement for relief
from Florida’s sultry subtropical climate.
A pair of magnolia trees, dark red siding,
ceiling fans, bamboo flooring, and rustic wooden
beams salvaged from a Georgia barn add to the
inviting atmosphere of the little house in the
middle of Florida State University’s
brick-and-mortar campus.
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It may look like an out-of-place throwback, but
the $575,000 Off-Grid, Zero Emissions Building —
OGZEB — has a futuristic purpose. Its mission is to
test potential solutions to the world’s energy and
climate change problems by combining old tricks with
cutting-edge technology, including a unique
solar-hydrogen experiment.
“What we’re trying to do is create the building
of tomorrow with a lot of the feel of today,” says
project manager Justin Kramer. “If nobody wanted to
live in it, what’s the point?”
Like a 19th century
cracker house, there are no power lines.
Solar panels on the roof are one of the few hints
that the two-bedroom home is not a relic of the
past. Solar panels have been popping up on rooftops
around the country this year, in part because of an
expanded federal subsidy that pays for 30 percent of
the cost. States, including Florida, offer
additional tax credits and incentives that further
drive down the cost.
With Florida State’s off-grid house, part of the
electrical energy they produce is used to turn water
into hydrogen for power when the sun isn’t shining.
Dedicated in August, OGZEB has a couple small
offices, but most of the interior, including an
expansive living-dining-kitchen area, is strictly
residential. Graduate students, staffers, and VIPs
will take turns living there to give old and
emerging technologies alike a real world tryout.
“If it’s not being lived in and used, we’re not
getting good data,” Mr. Kramer says.
Similar experiments are being done elsewhere, but
what sets Florida State’s effort apart from most is
the building’s reliance on hydrogen for power at
night and on cloudy or rainy days.
Hydrogen is a potential low-cost alternative to
batteries because storage tanks for the
lighter-than-air gas are comparatively simple and
cheap.
“It’s a viable concept that they are
demonstrating,” says Yogi Goswami, co-director of
the Clean Energy Research Center at the University
of South Florida. “For hydrogen the problem is the
cost of production. It’s usually high. If they are
going to reduce that cost, that’s moving in the
right direction.”
Florida State scientists think they have a
solution, Kramer says. They’ve developed a way to
use relatively cheap and common metals to replace
platinum, a critical but rare and high-priced
element that makes hydrogen from water electrolysis
devices expensive.
Perfecting that technology is going to take more
time and money so the house is starting with an
off-the-shelf version that uses traditional platinum
electrodes, Kramer said.
To make a sufficient amount of hydrogen, the
house needs a hefty array of photo voltaic solar
panels. They produce 6.9 kilowatts of power compared
to 1 or 2 kilowatts for a typical off-grid house of
its size — 1,064 square feet, Kramer says.
Another innovative feature is how the hydrogen is
used. Besides a hydrogen fuel cell to generate
electricity, the gas is burned in the kitchen range
and other appliances may follow.
“It’s more efficient to combust hydrogen,” Kramer
says.
It also burns cleanly, emitting only water vapor
and heat.
The problem is conventional appliances are
designed for heavier natural gas and propane. They
must be modified to safely burn hydrogen.
In a joint effort with the Viking Range Corp.,
Florida State researchers are transforming the
house’s kitchen stove. One step was to narrow the
range-top jets because hydrogen packs more punch
than natural gas.
It burns straight up instead of radiating so “you
can actually hold your hand to the side of the flame
for extended periods of time,” Kramer said.
That also means hydrogen won’t work in the
radiant-heat oven. It’s going to be converted to a
convection oven that uses fans to circulate the
heat.
Gas-burning refrigerators that once were fairly
common have become rare for household use, but most
recreational vehicles still have small propane
versions. The house now has an electric
refrigerator, but Kramer says the goal is to replace
it with one powered by hydrogen, solar-heated water,
or both.
Key hydrogen components are housed under the
building in a concrete block and steel blast room.
“We’ve all seen the Hindenburg,” Kramer says.
“Goodness, that has brought all kinds of fun to my
life as a hydrogen researcher.”
Hydrogen, though, is relatively safe compared to
natural gas as long as you aren’t riding in an
airship filled with it, Kramer says. Being so light,
it diffuses rapidly instead of building up to catch
fire like natural gas. Also, breathing it in won’t
suffocate you — it will just change your voice like
inhaling helium.
“You would just talk in a high, annoying pitch,”
Kramer says.
Hydrogen power may be the ultimate goal, but it
could take decades to perfect. In the meantime, the
house is being used to demonstrate other
technologies that can be applied right now or in
just a few years. That includes the cracker house
techniques that fell out of use with the arrival of
air conditioning.
There are no plans to heat the home with hydrogen
although that may be a good option for colder
climates, Kramer says. Instead, it uses an electric
and geothermal system that’s very efficient in
Tallahassee’s mild climate. Researchers, though, may
try to integrate the solar hot water and heating-air
conditioning systems.
Besides photo voltaic panels producing
electricity, the roof has a solar hot water array,
an older but efficient technology. It’s also
oversized, heating enough water to 133 degrees to
fill a 300-gallon tank beneath the house. That’s
more than enough for bathing and dish washing. The
excess will be used to test future applications such
as the heating-air conditioning system and
refrigerator.
Simple light shelves under the upper windows
reflect incoming sunshine and spread it evenly to
avoid hot spots. Other energy-saving technologies
include a reflective roof, dual-flush toilets and
recycled material such as the wooden beams and trim,
aluminum siding and ash in the concrete pilings.
The house is bolted together with large, double
sheets of oriented strand board sandwiched around
foam insulation. That eliminates the need for most
studs, which transfer outdoor heat into a house,
Kramer says.
“This house is designed to be torn apart and put
back together as new technologies are developed,”
Kramer says. “We want to took at today and tomorrow
at the same time. |