In 1806,
Francois Isaac de Rivaz designed the
De Rivaz engine, the first internal combustion engine, which ran on a
hydrogen/oxygen mixture.
Étienne Lenoir produced the
Hippomobile in 1863. In 1970, Paul Dieges patented a modified gasoline ICE which can run on hydrogen.
Tokyo City University has been developing hydrogen ICEs since 1970. They have recently developed a hydrogen-fueled bus and a truck. Mazda has developed
Wankel engines that burn hydrogen. The advantage of using ICEs such as Wankel and piston engines is that the cost of retooling for production is much lower. Existing-technology ICEs can still be used in conditions where fuel cells are not a viable solution as yet, for example in cold-weather applications. In 1990 an electric
solar vehicle was converted to hydrogen using a 107 ml four-stroke engine. It was used in a research project which examined and measured losses from the power conversions sun → electricity → electrolysis → storage → motor → transmission → wheels. Compared to its previous battery-electric mode, the range proved higher but the system efficiency was lower, and the available
alkaline hydrogen generator was too large to be carried on board. It was powered by a stationary solar installation, and the hydrogen produced was stored in pressurised bottles. Between 2005 and 2007,
BMW tested a luxury car named the
BMW Hydrogen 7, powered by a hydrogen ICE, which achieved 301 km/h (187 mph) in tests. At least two of these concepts have been manufactured.
HICE forklift trucks have been demonstrated based on converted diesel internal combustion engines with
direct injection.
Alset GmbH developed a hybrid hydrogen system that allows vehicle to use petrol and hydrogen fuels separately or at the same time with an ICE. This technology was used with
Aston Martin Rapide S during the
24 Hours Nürburgring race. The Rapide S was the first vehicle to finish the race with hydrogen technology. Hydrogen internal combustion engine development has been receiving more interest recently, particularly for heavy duty commercial vehicles. Part of the motivation for this is as a bridging technology to meet future climate emission goals, and as technology more compatible with existing automotive knowledge and manufacturing. In September 2022,
Kawasaki unveiled a hydrogen combustion engine developed using the same injector as the hydrogen Corolla, based on the
Ninja H2. In May 2023,
Yamaha,
Honda, Kawasaki and
Suzuki received approval from Japan's
Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI) to form a technological research association called HySE (Hydrogen Small mobility & Engine technology) to develop hydrogen-powered engines for small mobility.{{Cite news|date=18 May 2023 |title=Yamaha, Honda, Kawasaki and Suzuki partner on hydrogen engines for small mobility; HySE ==Records and motor sport==