The city of Carmel is about to become the first in the nation to retrofit some of its fleet vehicles with a new technology that produces cleaner-burning and more fuel-efficient hydrogen energy.

The technology was formed at Purdue University and commercialized by Carmel-based company AlGalCo, which after 14 years of beta testing and patent processes is finally rolling out products for Carmel's city fleet. 

The new technology creates hydrogen energy on demand out of a special aluminum alloy. How does it work? Just add water.

And a little secret sauce.

“It’s on demand … and also it's totally renewable and sustainable," said AlGalCo founder and president  Kurt Koehler. "After all those years in the back of a pickup truck trying to figure this out."

The new tech gadget, which has been approved by the Environmental Protection Agency, attaches to the back of a vehicle and connects to the engine. It produces the hydrogen energy that supplements gasoline, boosting gas mileage and saving fuel. 

Hydrogen fuel technology burns with zero emissions and is considered by many to be on the cutting edge of sustainable energy. The science is still somewhat new but expanding — Indiana-based engine company Cummins Inc. unveiled a heavy-duty truck powered by battery and hydrogen last year, and the world's first bus system powered by hydrogen technology debuted in France in December.

Fully hydrogen-powered vehicles require an all new engine, and such a conversion might be too expensive for a city. AlGalCo's technology, Koehler said, supplements an existing engine without those obstacles. 

"There are different ways you can make hydrogen on demand, but not the way we do it," Koehler said. "The chemistry is just so elegant."

Just add water

AlGalCo — a shortened name for "Aluminum Gallium Company" — takes regular aluminum and adds to it a "special sauce," covered by patent. This special sauce transforms the material into an aluminum alloy that stays solid. 

That is, until you add water to it.

The H2O molecules in water — two hydrogen atoms, one oxygen — have a special interaction with the aluminum alloy. When combined, the water molecules fall apart, the oxygen atoms attaching to the aluminum to create aluminum oxide and the hydrogen atoms breaking off to create energy. 

AlGalCo uses a container attached to the back of a vehicle to deliver this energy to the vehicle's engine. When the driver runs out of hydrogen, they can easily swap out the canister inside for a new one.

"You don't have to modify the engine, you don't have to do have any special fuel infrastructure, you don't have to do anything," Koehler said. "You come in, take out the old canisters, off you go."

The aluminum oxide left over in the process can be recycled indefinitely, Koehler said, even re-smelted down to be used again in new canisters. He said he's currently speaking with wind farms about using their extra energy for this process.

In tests, the product showed a 15% improvement in gas mileage and a 20% reduction in carbon emissions, Koehler said.

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Pricing and lease contracts are still being negotiated with some of the cities considering AlGalCo technology, but Carmel Mayor James Brainard said the city would be spending about $5,000 this summer to outfit more than five vehicles.

Depending on the agreement reached, the product's monthly cost could be lower than the projected savings in fuel, around $80, Koehler said. He said this means the stainless steel system, designed to last at least 10 to 20 years, could save the owner money from the beginning. 

Citing the billions of dollars Americans spend on gasoline each year, Koehler said he sees a lot of opportunity for something that could cut fuel costs.

"It’s a pretty big market," he said.

14 years of work

In a sense, Koehler's hydrogen fuel system is the intersection of the state's two largest academic institutions: the science and technology expertise of Purdue University and the business savvy learned at Indiana University.

Koehler's a businessman, not a chemist. He graduated with a degree in marketing and management from IU and went on to earn a Master's in European History. 

As luck would have it, an encounter with Purdue representatives at the Indiana State Fair piqued his interest and ultimately led him to Purdue professor Jerry Woodall, who had developed the aluminum alloy technology. The IndyStar was not able to reach Woodall, who is retired from Purdue.