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Caribbeans

(774 posts)
Sat Mar 23, 2024, 09:50 PM Mar 23

Car & Driver: Nikola's HYLA Stations Are a 'Supercharger Moment' for Hydrogen Trucking



Nikola's HYLA Stations Are a 'Supercharger Moment' for Hydrogen Trucking

Nikola TRE FCHEV trucks can cover 500 miles with their full tanks of hydrogen, but HYLA stations welcome other hydrogen-powered 18-wheel rigs too.

Dan Edmunds | Car and Driver | MAR 22, 2024

*HYLA, a portmanteau of HYdrogen and NikoLA, is a Nikola-owned subsidiary that is focusing on building a "robust hydrogen supply chain."

*HYLA's first station can refill a typical commercial truck in less than 20 minutes. It's located near countless warehouses in Ontario, California, a trucking hub within range of local ports.

*Portable above-ground units make up the station, and they use liquid hydrogen that is converted to gaseous form as it is dispensed into a truck and pressurized to 10,000 psi.


Nikola, an alternate-fuel heavy-duty truckmaker with a checkered past, has taken a big step toward ensuring future success by opening its first HYLA-branded hydrogen refueling station. It's built to fill the refueling needs of the company's own Tre FCHEV (fuel-cell hydrogen electric vehicle). You could call this Nikola's "Supercharger moment," a Tesla-like move in which they take charge of both the chicken and the egg sides of the equation so potential customers of their Tre FCHEV semi will not have to wonder how they'll refuel their new rigs.

But HYLA stations are not built to serve Nikola's trucks exclusively: the H70 refueling standard and nozzle design they employ is an industry standard that is also used by heavy-duty hydrogen fuel-cell trucks from Hyundai and others.

The use of liquid hydrogen solves a couple of problems that can plague the gaseous hydrogen stations geared toward the Toyota Mirai and Hyundai Nexo, particularly capacity and downtime. A given amount of liquid hydrogen takes up only a tenth the space of hydrogen in gaseous form, so the portable above-ground units (there are currently two at this location) can refill many more trucks—about 20 to 25 trucks per day, per unit. Furthermore, the extremely cold nature of liquid hydrogen (-423 Fahrenheit) eliminates the overheating issues that can hamper gaseous hydrogen delivery. Finally, the HYLA stations (which will be open 24/7) are staffed by technicians that carry out refueling and monitor performance.

Is a National Network Like Tesla's Coming?

HYLA plans to open several more stations around California in the coming months, with the easily permitted above-ground configurations like this one morphing into permanent below-ground stations as permitting matures, at which point the above-ground units can hopscotch to seed another refueling hub at another location. Their near-term goal is to get the Interstate 5 corridor covered from San Diego to Seattle, but there are rumblings about programs in other states that could lead to a more national network. We do remember a time when the nascent Tesla Supercharger network consisted of just six stations—all of them in California—and look at where we are now...more
https://www.caranddriver.com/news/a60277959/nikola-hyla-hydrogen-fueling-stations-details/



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