Practical Hydrogen-powered cars, also widely known as Fuel-Cell Vehicles have yet to gain the mainstream nod of approval. Toyota aims to change this with the all-new 2016 Mirai.
It's based on the current 2014 Toyota Prius v platform, albeit a little longer. Power comes from a 151-hp electric motor that's shared with the current-generation Lexus RX 450h. The Mirai's battery is also the same 1.7 kilowatt-hour version used in the Camry Hybrid, while the fuel cell itself sits underneath the front seats. Two carbon-fiber compressed hydrogen tanks sit behind the passenger seat and underneath the rear passenger bench seat.
To see how it all works, check out the video below.