No. 1 (yacht)
History | |
---|---|
Name | No. 1 |
Owner | IPF Energie- und Umwelttechnik GmbH |
Builder | Beneteau, in partnership with MTU Friedrichshafen |
Maiden voyage | August 2003, Japan |
Homeport | Kressbronn, Lake Constance |
General characteristics | |
Length | 12.26 m (40.2 ft) |
Beam | 3.76 m (12.3 ft) |
Installed power | 6 kg of hydrogen in 3 hydrogen tanks at 300 bar, four 1.2 kWa |
Speed | 7-knot (13 km/h) by fuel cell/electric |
Notes | First fuel cell-powered yacht |
No. 1 is the name of a sailing yacht which is power-assisted by an electric motor that gets its electricity from hydrogen fuel cells. It is the first ever yacht to be fuel cell-powered.[1] The boat was certified under the Germanischer Lloyd guidelines for fuel cells on ships and boats.[2][3] The yacht's debut was in August 2003 in Japan, and it is commissioned at Lake Constance (Kressbronn am Bodensee).
MTU Friedrichshafen, the company that designed the boat's power system, has said that it views a move towards fuel cell-based power systems as logical given the demand for clean, quiet energy sources in leisure craft such as yachts.[4]
Specifications
[edit]Boat 12.26 m long, width 3.76 m, 6 kg of hydrogen in 3 hydrogen tanks at 300 bar, four 1.2 kWa[5] PEM fuel cells, 9 gel batteries, radius of action 225 km at a speed of 8 kts on the propeller.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "First yacht with certified fuel cell propulsion". Fuel Cells Bulletin. 2003 (12): 4–5. 2003. doi:10.1016/S1464-2859(03)00015-4. ISSN 1464-2859.
- ^ GL- Rules for classification and construction
- ^ US Department of Energy. "Specialty Vehicles Archived 2006-09-29 at the Wayback Machine"
- ^ Fuel cell technology
- ^ Specifications