Liquid hydrogen is cryogenic, its boiling point is approximately 20 Kelvin. For reference, Kelvin scale is absolute; room temperature is around 295 K. LH2 is "stored" (I use the term loosely) in vacuum insulated dewars, and boils off at a rate of approximately 1% of the container's rated capacity per day. Your statement is technically true, but highly deceptive. Shame on you.
It can also be stored underground.
Lots of things can be stored underground. LH2 will still boil off at 1% per day ...
TG, you're trying to put lipstick on a pig. It's still a pig. Hydrogen is not an energy source, nor is it a particularly good energy transfer medium. It has some utility as rocket fuel, for reasons very specific (as in impulse) to rocketry and not applicable terrestrial locomotion.
Have a nice day.
Not at all. Done all the time. What was deceitful was your implying it was not done.
” boils off at a rate of approximately 1% of the container’s rated capacity per day.”
For tanker trucks. Properly designed storage tanks are seeing 0.2% loss per day.
Thank you! And see my previous.