Australia
The Role of Offshore Wind Power in Renewable Hydrogen Production
Jan 2023
Publication
We investigate the role of offshore wind in a hybrid system comprising solar PV offshore wind electrical storage (pumped hydro energy storage or battery) and an electrolyser in an off-grid hydrogen production system. Further we capture a wide range of future cost reduction scenarios for offshore wind power and solar PV generation in addition to accounting for future projected falls in electrolyser costs allowing future hydrogen costs to be estimated with a variety of different assumptions. The empirical setting of Australia and incorporation of solar PV as an additional potential source of electricity enables us to examine the contribution of offshore wind to renewable hydrogen production when an low-cost renewable alternative is available. This study complements a small number of studies on opportunities for offshore wind power in the Australian setting (Briggs et al. 2021; Golestani et al. 2021; Aryai et al. 2021) and contributes to research on the potential for offshore wind to contribute to green hydrogen production focused on the crucial Asia-Pacific region (Kim and Kim 2017; Song et al. 2021).<br/>In the following sections we describe the optimization model and the process used for selecting sites used in the study. We then summarize the modelling scenarios and assumptions before outlining the modelling results. We conclude by discussing the implications of the findings.
Sizing of Hybrid Supercapacitors and Lithium-Ion Batteries for Green Hydrogen Production from PV in the Australian Climate
Feb 2023
Publication
Instead of storing the energy produced by photovoltaic panels in batteries for later use to power electric loads green hydrogen can also be produced and used in transportation heating and as a natural gas alternative. Green hydrogen is produced in a process called electrolysis. Generally the electrolyser can generate hydrogen from a fluctuating power supply such as renewables. However due to the startup time of the electrolyser and electrolyser degradation accelerated by multiple shutdowns an idle mode is required. When in idle mode the electrolyser uses 10% of the rated electrolyser load. An energy management system (EMS) shall be applied where a storage technology such as a lithium-ion capacitor or lithium-ion battery is used. This paper uses a state-machine EMS of PV microgrid for green hydrogen production and energy storage to manage the hydrogen production during the morning from solar power and in the night using the stored energy in the energy storage which is sized for different scenarios using a lithium-ion capacitor and lithium-ion battery. The mission profile and life expectancy of the lithium-ion capacitor and lithium-ion battery are evaluated considering the system’s local irradiance and temperature conditions in the Australian climate. A tradeoff between storage size and cutoffs of hydrogen production as variables of the cost function is evaluated for different scenarios. The lithium-ion capacitor and lithium-ion battery are compared for each tested scenario for an optimum lifetime. It was found that a lithium-ion battery on average is 140% oversized compared to a lithium-ion capacitor but a lithium-ion capacitor has a smaller remaining capacity of 80.2% after ten years of operation due to its higher calendar aging while LiB has 86%. It was also noticed that LiB is more affected by cycling aging while LiC is affected by calendar aging. However the average internal resistance after 10 years for the lithium-ion capacitor is 264% of the initial internal resistance while for lithium-ion battery is 346% making lithium-ion capacitor a better candidate for energy storage if it is used for grid regulation as it requires maintaining a lower internal resistance over the lifetime of the storage.
Improved Engine Performance and Significantly Reduced Greenhouse Gas Emissions by Fumigating Hydrogen in a Diesel Engine
Oct 2022
Publication
A thermodynamic model was developed for combustion performance and emissions with a reference diesel fuel a 10 vol% methanol blend with 90 vol% diesel a 10 vol% ethanol with 90 vol% diesel and a 4% hydrogen fumigating in the inlet port along with diesel direct injection. The diesel and two alcohol blends (10% methanol–90% diesel and 10% ethanol–90% diesel) was directly injected into the cylinder while hydrogen was fumigated at the inlet port. The model was developed by commercial GT-Suite software. Besides engine performance exergy and energy rates were estimated for the four fuels. Among the four fuels/fuel blends hydrogen fuel (4% fumigated hydrogen) shows the best performance in terms of exergy energy rates specific fuel consumption power and greenhouse gas emissions. Regarding greenhouse gases carbon dioxide was only considered in this investigation as it contributes to a significant detrimental effect on environmental pollution.
Strategies for the Adoption of Hydrogen-Based Energy Storage Systems: An Exploratory Study in Australia
Aug 2022
Publication
A significant contribution to the reduction of carbon emissions will be enabled through the transition from a centralised fossil fuel system to a decentralised renewable electricity system. However due to the intermittent nature of renewable energy storage is required to provide a suitable response to dynamic loads and manage the excess generated electricity with utilisation during periods of low generation. This paper investigates the use of stationary hydrogen-based energy storage systems for microgrids and distributed energy resource systems. An exploratory study was conducted in Australia based on a mixed methodology. Ten Australian industry experts were interviewed to determine use cases for hydrogen-based energy storage systems’ requirements barriers methods and recommendations. This study suggests that the current cost of the electrolyser fuel cell and storage medium and the current low round-trip efficiency are the main elements inhibiting hydrogen-based energy storage systems. Limited industry and practical experience are barriers to the implementation of hydrogen storage systems. Government support could help scale hydrogen-based energy storage systems among early adopters and enablers. Furthermore collaboration and knowledge sharing could reduce risks allowing the involvement of more stakeholders. Competition and innovation could ultimately reduce the costs increasing the uptake of hydrogen storage systems.
Economics of Renewable Hydrogen Production Using Wind and Solar Energy: A Case Study for Queensland, Australia
Dec 2023
Publication
This study presents a technoeconomic analysis of renewables-based hydrogen production in Queensland Australia under Optimistic Reference and Pessimistic scenarios to address uncertainty in cost predictions. The goal of the work was to ascertain if the target fam-gate cost of AUD 3/kg (approx. USD 2/kg) could be reached. Economies of scale and the learning rate concept were factored into the economic model to account for the effect of scale-up and cost reductions as electrolyser manufacturing capacity grows. The model assumes that small-scale to large-scale wind turbine (WT)-based and photovoltaic (PV)-based power generation plants are directly coupled with an electrolyser array and utilises hourly generation data for the Gladstone hydrogen-hub region. Employing first a commonly used simplified approach the electrolyser array was sized based on the maximum hourly power available for hydrogen production. The initial results indicated that scale-up is very beneficial: the levelised cost of green hydrogen (LCOH) could decrease by 49% from $6.1/kg to $3.1/kg when scaling PV-based plant from 10 MW to 1 GW and for WT-based plant by 36% from $5.8/kg to $3.7/kg. Then impacts on the LCOH of incorporating curtailment of ineffective peak power and electrolyser overload capacity were investigated and shown to be significant. Also significant was the beneficial effect of recognising that electrolyser efficiency depends on input power. The latter two factors have mostly been overlooked in the literature. Incorporating in the model the influence on the LCOH of real-world electrolyser operational characteristics overcomes a shortcoming of the simplified sizing method namely that a large portion of electrolyser capacity is under-utilised leading to unnecessarily high values of the LCOH. It was found that AUD 3/kg is achievable if the electrolyser array is properly sized which should help to incentivise large-scale renewable hydrogen projects in Australia and elsewhere.
A Review of Hydrogen Technologies and Engineering Solutions for Railway Vehicle Design and Operations
Oct 2021
Publication
Interest in hydrogen-powered rail vehicles has gradually increased worldwide over recent decades due to the global pressure on reduction in greenhouse gas emissions technology availability and multiple options of power supply. In the past research and development have been primarily focusing on light rail and regional trains but the interest in hydrogen-powered freight and heavy haul trains is also growing. The review shows that some technical feasibility has been demonstrated from the research and experiments on proof-of-concept designs. Several rail vehicles powered by hydrogen either are currently operating or are the subject of experimental programmes. The paper identifies that fuel cell technology is well developed and has obvious application in providing electrical traction power while hydrogen combustion in traditional IC engines and gas turbines is not yet well developed. The need for on-board energy storage is discussed along with the benefits of energy management and control systems.
Influence of Natural Gas and Hydrogen Properties on Internal Combustion Engine Performance, Combustion, and Emissions: A Review
Jan 2024
Publication
This paper provides a comprehensive overview of the physical properties and applications of natural gas (NG) and hydrogen as fuels in internal combustion (IC) engines. The paper also meticulously examines the use of both NG and hydrogen as a fuel in vehicles their production physical characteristics and combustion properties. It reviews the current experimental studies in the literature and investigates the results of using both fuels. It further covers the challenges associated with injectors needle valves lubrication spark plugs and safety requirements for both fuels. Finally the challenges related to the storage production and safety of both fuels are also discussed. The literature review reveals that NG in spark ignition (SI) engines has a clear and direct positive impact on fuel economy and certain emissions notably reducing CO2 and non-methane hydrocarbons. However its effect on other emissions such as unburnt hydrocarbons (UHC) nitrogen oxides (NOx) and carbon monoxide (CO) is less clear. NG which is primarily methane has a lower carbon-to-hydrogen ratio than diesel fuel resulting in lower CO2 emissions per unit of energy released. In contrast hydrogen is particularly well-suited for use in gasoline engines due to its high self-ignition temperature. While increasing the hydrogen content of NG engines reduces torque and power output higher hydrogen input results in reduced fuel consumption and the mitigation of toxic exhaust emissions. Due to its high ignition temperature hydrogen is not inherently suitable for direct use in diesel engines necessitating the exploration of alternative methods for hydrogen introduction into the cylinder. The literature review suggests that hydrogen in diesel engines has shown a reduction in specific exhaust emissions and fuel consumption and an increase in NOx emissions. Overall the paper provides a valuable and informative overview of the challenges and opportunities associated with using hydrogen and NG as fuels in IC engines. It highlights the need for further research and development to address the remaining challenges such as the development of more efficient combustion chambers and the reduction of NOx emissions.
Material Challenges and Hydrogen Embrittlement Assessment for Hydrogen Utilisation in Industrial Scale
Sep 2023
Publication
Hydrogen has been studied extensively as a potential enabler of the energy transition from fossil fuels to renewable sources. It promises a feasible decarbonisation route because it can act as an energy carrier a heat source or a chemical reactant in industrial processes. Hydrogen can be produced via renewable energy sources such as solar hydro or geothermic routes and is a more stable energy carrier than intermittent renewable sources. If hydrogen can be stored efficiently it could play a crucial role in decarbonising industries. For hydrogen to be successfully implemented in industrial systems its impact on infrastructure needs to be understood quantified and controlled. If hydrogen technology is to be economically feasible we need to investigate and understand the retrofitting of current industrial infrastructure. Currently there is a lack of comprehensive knowledge regarding alloys and components performance in long-term hydrogen-containing environments at industrial conditions associated with high-temperature hydrogen processing/production. This review summarises insights into the gaps in hydrogen embrittlement (HE) research that apply to high-temperature high-pressure systems in industrial processes and applications. It illustrates why it is still important to develop characterisation techniques and methods for hydrogen interaction with metals and surfaces under these conditions. The review also describes the implications of using hydrogen in large-scale industrial processes.
Green Steel: Synergies between the Australian Iron Ore Industry and the Production of Green Industry
May 2023
Publication
Green steel produced using renewable energy and hydrogen presents a promising avenue to decarbonize steel manufacturing and expand the hydrogen industry. Australia endowed with abundant renewable resources and iron ore deposits is ideally placed to support this global effort. This paper's two-step analytical approach offers the first comprehensive assessment of Australia's potential to develop green steel as a value-added export commodity. The Economic Fairways modelling reveals a strong alignment between prospective hydrogen hubs and current and future iron ore operations enabling shared infrastructure development and first-mover advantages. By employing a site-based system optimization that integrates both wind and solar power sources the cost of producing green steel could decrease significantly to around AU$900 per tonne by 2030 and AU$750 per tonne by 2050. Moreover replacing 1% of global steel production would require 35 GW of well-optimized wind and solar photovoltaics 11 GW of hydrogen electrolysers and 1000 square kilometres of land. Sensitivity analysis further indicates that iron ore prices would exert a long-term influence on green steel prices. Overall this study highlights the opportunities and challenges facing the Australian iron ore industry in contributing to the decarbonization of the global steel sector underscoring the crucial role of government support in driving the growth and development of the green steel industry.
Synergistic Integration of Hydrogen Energy Economy with UK’s Sustainable Development Goals: A Holistic Approach to Enhancing Safety and Risk Mitigation
Oct 2023
Publication
Hydrogen is gaining prominence as a sustainable energy source in the UK aligning with the country’s commitment to advancing sustainable development across diverse sectors. However a rigorous examination of the interplay between the hydrogen economy and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) is imperative. This study addresses this imperative by comprehensively assessing the risks associated with hydrogen production storage transportation and utilization. The overarching aim is to establish a robust framework that ensures the secure deployment and operation of hydrogen-based technologies within the UK’s sustainable development trajectory. Considering the unique characteristics of the UK’s energy landscape infrastructure and policy framework this paper presents practical and viable recommendations to facilitate the safe and effective integration of hydrogen energy into the UK’s SDGs. To facilitate sophisticated decision making it proposes using an advanced Decision-Making Trial and Evaluation Laboratory (DEMATEL) tool incorporating regret theory and a 2-tuple spherical linguistic environment. This tool enables a nuanced decision-making process yielding actionable insights. The analysis reveals that Incident Reporting and Learning Robust Regulatory Framework Safety Standards and Codes are pivotal safety factors. At the same time Clean Energy Access Climate Action and Industry Innovation and Infrastructure are identified as the most influential SDGs. This information provides valuable guidance for policymakers industry stakeholders and regulators. It empowers them to make well-informed strategic decisions and prioritize actions that bolster safety and sustainable development as the UK transitions towards a hydrogen-based energy system. Moreover the findings underscore the varying degrees of prominence among different SDGs. Notably SDG 13 (Climate Action) exhibits relatively lower overall distinction at 0.0066 and a Relation value of 0.0512 albeit with a substantial impact. In contrast SDG 7 (Clean Energy Access) and SDG 9 (Industry Innovation and Infrastructure) demonstrate moderate prominence levels (0.0559 and 0.0498 respectively) each with its unique influence emphasizing their critical roles in the UK’s pursuit of a sustainable hydrogen-based energy future.
Recent Progress and Techno-economic Analysis of Liquid Organic Hydrogen Carriers for Australian Renewable Energy Export - A Critical Review
Jan 2024
Publication
Hydrogen as a primary carbon-free energy carrier is confronted by challenges in storage and transportation. However liquid organic hydrogen carriers (LOHCs) present a promising solution for storing and transporting hydrogen at ambient temperature and atmospheric pressure. Unlike circular energy carriers such as methanol ammonia and synthetic natural gas LOHCs do not produce by-products during hydrogen recovery. LOHCs only act as hydrogen carriers and the carriers can also be recycled for reuse. Although there are considerable advantages to LOHCs there are also some drawbacks especially relative to the energy consumption during the dehydrogenation step of the LOHC recycling. This review summarizes the recent progresses in LOHC technologies focusing on catalyst developments process and reactor designs applications and techno-economic assessments (TEA). LOHC technologies can potentially offer significant benefits to Australia especially in terms of hydrogen as an export commodity. LOHCs can help avoid capital costs associated with infrastructure such as transportation vessels while reducing hydrogen loss during transportation such as in the case of liquid hydrogen (LH2). Additionally it minimises CO2 emissions as observed in methane and methanol reforming. Thus it is essential to dedicate more efforts to explore and develop LOHC technologies in the Australian context.
Open-source Project Feasibility Tools for Supporting Development of the Green Ammonia Value Chain
Nov 2022
Publication
Ammonia plays a vital role in feeding the world through fertilizer production as well as having other industrial uses. However current ammonia production processes rely heavily on fossil fuels mostly natural gas to generate hydrogen as a feedstock. There is an urgent need to re-design and decarbonise the production process to reduce greenhouse emissions and avoid dependence on volatile gas markets and a depleting resource base. Renewable energy driven electrolysis to generate hydrogen provides a viable pathway for producing carbon-free or green ammonia. However a key challenge associated with producing green ammonia is managing low cost but highly variable wind and solar renewable energy generation for hydrogen electrolysis while maintaining reliable operation of the less flexible ammonia synthesis unit. To date green ammonia production has only been demonstrated at pilot scale and optimising plant configurations and scaling up production facilities is an urgent task. Existing feasibility studies have demonstrated the ability to model and cost green ammonia production pathways that can overcome the technical and economic challenges. However these existing approaches are context specific demonstrating the ability to model and cost green ammonia production for defined locations with set configurations. In this paper we present a modelling framework that consolidates the array of configurations previously studied into a single framework that can be tailored to the location of interest. Our open-source green ammonia modelling and costing tool dynamically simulates the integration of renewable energy with a wide range of balancing power and storage options to meet the flexible demands of the green ammonia production process at hourly time resolution over a year or more. Unlike existing models the open-source implementation of our tool allows it to be used by a potentially wide range of stakeholders to explore their own projects and help guide the upscaling of green ammonia as a pathway for decarbonisation. Using Gladstone in Australia as a case study a 1 million tonne per annum (MMTPA) green ammonia plant is modelled and costed using price assumptions for major equipment in 2030 provided by the Australian Energy Market Operator (AEMO). Using a hybrid (solar PV and wind) renewable energy source and Battery Energy Storage System as balancing technology we estimate a levelized cost of ammonia (LCOA) between 0.69 and 0.92 USD kgNH3 -1 . While greater than historical ammonia production costs from natural gas falling renewables costs and emission reduction imperatives suggest a major future role for green ammonia.
Identifying Informed Beliefs about Hydrogen Technologies Across the Energy Supply Chain
Apr 2023
Publication
Developing a thriving hydrogen industry will depend on public and community support. Past research mainly focusing on the acceptance of hydrogen fuelling stations and cars suggests that people generally support hydrogen energy technology (HET). Few studies have however considered how people think about other components of the hydrogen supply chain (i.e. technologies required to make store transport and use hydrogen). Moreover there has been limited research investigating how people interpret and develop beliefs about HET after being presented with technical information. This paper attempts to address these research gaps by presenting the findings from four face-to-face focus group discussions conducted in Australia. The findings suggest that people have differing views about HET which depends on the type of technology and these views influence levels of support. The study also revealed concerns about a range of other factors that have yet to be considered in hydrogen acceptance research (e.g. perceived water use efficiency and indirect benefits). The findings highlight the value of qualitative research for identifying salient beliefs that shape attitudes towards HET and provide recommendations for future research and how to effectively communicate with the public and communities about an emerging hydrogen industry.
Can the Hydrogen Economy Concept be the Solution to the Future Energy Crisis?
Feb 2022
Publication
The Hydrogen Economy concept is being proposed as a means of reducing and eventually decarbonising the world’s energy use. It looks to hydrogen as being a replacement for methane (natural gas) and generally as a way of removing all fossil fuels from the energy supply. The concept however has at least four flaws as follows: (1) hydrogen has significantly different properties to methane; (2) hydrogen has properties that create significant hazards; (3) hydrogen has a very small initiation (activation) energy; and (4) liquid hydrogen cannot readily replace liquefied natural gas (LNG). Hydrogen’s hazards will prevent it from being accepted in a societal sense. To the question ‘Can the Hydrogen Economy concept be the solution to the future energy crisis?’ the answer is ‘no’. Hydrogen has and will have a role in world energy but that role will be limited to industry. For the future we need an advanced electric economy.
Contribution to Net Zero Emissions of Integrating Hydrogen Production in Wastewater Treatment Plants
Jul 2023
Publication
The reliability of renewable hydrogen supply for off-take applications is critical to the future sustainable energy economy. Integrated water electrolysis can be deployed at distributed municipal wastewater treatment plants (WWTP) creating opportunity for reduction in carbon emissions through direct and indirect use of the electrolysis output. A novel energy shifting process where the co-produced oxygen is compressed and stored to enhance the utilisation of intermittent renewable electricity is analysed. The hydrogen produced can be used in local fuel cell electric buses to replace incumbent diesel buses for public transport. However quantifying the extent of carbon emission reduction of this conceptual integrated system is key. In this study the integration of hydrogen production at a case study WWTP of 26000 EP capacity and using the hydrogen in buses was compared with two conventional systems: the base case of a WWTP with grid electricity consumption offset by solar PV and the community’s independent use of diesel buses for transport and the non-integrated configuration with hydrogen produced at the bus refuelling location operated independently of the WWTP. The system response was analysed using a Microsoft Excel simulation model with hourly time steps over a 12-month time frame. The model included a control scheme for the reliable supply of hydrogen for public transport and oxygen to the WWTP and considered expected reductions in carbon intensity of the national grid level of solar PV curtailment electrolyser efficiency and size of the solar PV system. Results showed that by 2031 when Australia’s national electricity is forecast to achieve a carbon intensity of less than 0.186 kg CO2-e/kWh integrating water electrolysis at a municipal WWTP for producing hydrogen for use in local hydrogen buses produced less carbon emissions than continuing to use diesel buses and offsetting emissions by exporting renewable electricity to the grid. By 2034 an annual reduction of 390 t–CO2–e is expected after changing to the integrated configuration. Considering electrolyser efficiency improvements and curtailment of renewable electricity the reduction increases to 872.8 t–CO2–e.
Electrochemical Ammonia: Power to Ammonia Ratio and Balance of Plant Requirements for Two Different Electrolysis Approaches
Nov 2021
Publication
Electrochemical ammonia generation allows direct low pressure synthesis of ammonia as an alternative to the established Haber-Bosch process. The increasing need to drive industry with renewable electricity central to decarbonisation and electrochemical ammonia synthesis offers a possible efficient and low emission route for this increasingly important chemical. It also provides a potential route for more distributed and small-scale ammonia synthesis with a reduced production footprint. Electrochemical ammonia synthesis is still early stage but has seen recent acceleration in fundamental understanding. In this work two different ammonia electrolysis systems are considered. Balance of plant (BOP) requirements are presented and modelled to compare performance and determine trade-offs. The first option (water fed cell) uses direct ammonia synthesis from water and air. The second (hydrogen-fed cell) involves a two-step electrolysis approach firstly producing hydrogen followed by electrochemical ammonia generation. Results indicate that the water fed approach shows the most promise in achieving low energy demand for direct electrochemical ammonia generation. Breaking the reaction into two steps for the hydrogen fed approach introduces a source of inefficiency which is not overcome by reduced BOP energy demands and will only be an attractive pathway for reactors which promise both high efficiency and increased ammonia formation rate compared to water fed cells. The most optimised scenario investigated here with 90% faradaic efficiency (FE) and 1.5 V cell potential (75% nitrogen utilisation) gives a power to ammonia value of 15 kWh/kg NH3 for a water fed cell. For the best hydrogen fed arrangement the requirement is 19 kWh/kg NH3. This is achieved with 0.5 V cell potential and 75% utilisation of both hydrogen and nitrogen (90% FE). Modelling demonstrated that balance of plant requirements for electrochemical ammonia are significant. Electrochemical energy inputs dominate energy requirements at low FE however in cases of high FE the BOP accounts for approximately 50% of the total energy demand mostly from ammonia separation requirements. In the hydrogen fed cell arrangement it was also demonstrated that recycle of unconverted hydrogen is essential for efficient operation even in the case where this increases BOP energy inputs
A Hydrogen Supply-chain Model Powering Australian Isolated Communities
Oct 2023
Publication
This article proposes a supply chain-based green hydrogen microgrid modelling for a number of remote Australian communities. Green hydrogen can be used as an emissions-free fuel source for electricity generation in places where large-scale renewable energy production is impossible due to land availability population or government regulations. This research focuses on the Torres Strait Island communities in northern Australia where the transition from diesel to renewable electricity generation is difficult due to very limited land availability on most islands. Due to geographical constraints low population and smaller electrical load the green hydrogen needs to be sourced from somewhere else. This research presents a green hydrogen supply chain model that leverages the land availability of one island to produce hydrogen to supply other island communities. In addition this research presents a model of producing and transporting green hydrogen while supplying cheaper electricity to the communities at focus. The study has used a transitional scenario planning approach and the HOMER simulation platform to find the least-cost solution. Based on the results a levelised cost of energy range of AU$0.42 and AU$0.44 was found. With the help of a green hydrogen supply chain CO2 emissions at the selected sites could be cut by 90 %. This study can be used as a guide for small clustered communities that could not support or justify large-scale renewable generation facilities but need more opportunities to install renewable generation.
EU Carbon Diplomacy: Assessing Hydrogen Security and Policy Impact in Australia and Germany
Dec 2021
Publication
Hydrogen is fast becoming a new international “super fuel” to accelerate global climate change ambitions. This paper has two inter-weaving themes. Contextually it focuses on the potential impact of the EU’s new Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) on fossil fuel-generated as opposed to green hydrogen imports. The CBAM as a transnational carbon adjustment mechanism has the potential to impact international trade in energy. It seeks both a level playing field between imports and EU internal markets (subject to ambitious EU climate change policies) and to encourage emissions reduction laggards through its “carbon diplomacy”. Countries without a price on carbon will be charged for embodied carbon in their supply chains when they export to the EU. Empirically we focus on two hydrogen export/import case studies: Australia as a non-EU state with ambitions to export hydrogen and Germany as an EU Member State reliant on energy imports. Energy security is central to energy trade debates but needs to be conceptualized beyond supply and demand economics to include geopolitics just transitions and the impacts of border carbon taxes and EU carbon diplomacy. Accordingly we apply and further develop a seven-dimension energy security-justice framework to the examples of brown blue and green hydrogen export/import hydrogen operations with varying carbon-intensity supply chains in Australia and Germany. Applying the framework we identify potential impact—risks and opportunities—associated with identified brown blue and green hydrogen export/import projects in the two countries. This research contributes to the emerging fields of international hydrogen trade supply chains and international carbon diplomacy and develops a potentially useful seven-dimension energy security-justice framework for energy researchers and policy analysts.
Storage Integrity During Underground Hydrogen Storage in Depleted Gas Reservoirs
Nov 2023
Publication
The transition from fossil fuels to renewable energy sources particularly hydrogen has emerged as a central strategy for decarbonization and the pursuit of net-zero carbon emissions. Meeting the demand for large-scale hydrogen storage a crucial component of the hydrogen supply chain has led to the exploration of underground hydrogen storage as an economically viable solution to global energy needs. In contrast to other subsurface storage options such as salt caverns and aquifers which are geographically limited depleted gas reservoirs have garnered increasing attention due to their broader distribution and higher storage capacity. However the safe storage and cycling of hydrogen in depleted gas reservoirs require the preservation of high stability and integrity in the caprock reservoir and wellbore. Nevertheless there exists a significant gap in the current research concerning storage integrity in underground hydrogen storage within depleted gas reservoirs and a systematic approach is lacking. This paper aims to address this gap by reviewing the primary challenges associated with storage integrity including geochemical reactions microbial activities faults and fractures and perspectives on hydrogen cycling. The study comprehensively reviews the processes and impacts such as abiotic and biotic mineral dissolution/precipitation reactivation and propagation of faults and fractures in caprock and host-rock wellbore instability due to cement degradation and casing corrosion and stress changes during hydrogen cycling. To provide a practical solution a technical screening tool has been developed considering controlling variables risks and consequences affecting storage integrity. Finally this paper highlights knowledge gaps and suggests feasible methods and pathways to mitigate these risks facilitating the development of large-scale underground hydrogen storage in depleted gas reservoirs.
Hydrogen Energy as Future of Sustainable Mobility
May 2022
Publication
Conventional fuels for vehicular applications generate hazardous pollutants which have an adverse effect on the environment. Therefore there is a high demand to shift towards environment-friendly vehicles for the present mobility sector. This paper highlights sustainable mobility and specifically sustainable transportation as a solution to reduce GHG emissions. Thus hydrogen fuel-based vehicular technologies have started blooming and have gained significance following the zero-emission policy focusing on various types of sustainable motilities and their limitations. Serving an incredible deliverance of energy by hydrogen fuel combustion engines hydrogen can revolution various transportation sectors. In this study the aspects of hydrogen as a fuel for sustainable mobility sectors have been investigated. In order to reduce the GHG (Green House Gas) emission from fossil fuel vehicles researchers have paid their focus for research and development on hydrogen fuel vehicles and proton exchange fuel cells. Also its development and progress in all mobility sectors in various countries have been scrutinized to measure the feasibility of sustainable mobility as a future. This paper is an inclusive review of hydrogen-based mobility in various sectors of transportation in particular fuel cell cars that provides information on various technologies adapted with time to add more towards perfection. When compared to electric vehicles with a 200-mile range fuel cell cars have a lower driving cost in all of the 2035 and 2050 scenarios. To stimulate the use of hydrogen as a passenger automobile fuel the cost of a hydrogen fuel cell vehicle (FCV) must be brought down to at least the same level as an electric vehicle. Compared to gasoline cars fuel cell vehicles use 43% less energy and generate 40% less CO2.
Impact of Experimentally Measured Relative Permeability Hysteresis on Reservoir-scale Performance of Undergound Hydrogen Storage (UHS)
Jan 2024
Publication
Underground Hydrogen Storage (UHS) is an emerging large-scale energy storage technology. Researchers are investigating its feasibility and performance including its injectivity productivity and storage capacity through numerical simulations. However several ad-hoc relative permeability and capillary pressure functions have been used in the literature with no direct link to the underlying physics of the hydrogen storage and production process. Recent relative permeability measurements for the hydrogen-brine system show very low hydrogen relative permeability and strong liquid phase hysteresis very different to what has been observed for other fluid systems for the same rock type. This raises the concern as to what extend the existing studies in the literature are able to reliably quantify the feasibility of the potential storage projects. In this study we investigate how experimentally measured hydrogen-brine relative permeability hysteresis affects the performance of UHS projects through numerical reservoir simulations. Relative permeability data measured during a hydrogen-water core-flooding experiment within ADMIRE project is used to design a relative permeability hysteresis model. Next numerical simulation for a UHS project in a generic braided-fluvial water-gas reservoir is performed using this hysteresis model. A performance assessment is carried out for several UHS scenarios with different drainage relative permeability curves hysteresis model coefficients and injection/production rates. Our results show that both gas and liquid relative permeability hysteresis play an important role in UHS irrespective of injection/production rate. Ignoring gas hysteresis may cause up to 338% of uncertainty on cumulative hydrogen production as it has negative effects on injectivity and productivity due to the resulting limited variation range of gas saturation and pressure during cyclic operations. In contrast hysteresis in the liquid phase relative permeability resolves this issue to some extent by improving the displacement of the liquid phase. Finally implementing relative permeability curves from other fluid systems during UHS performance assessment will cause uncertainty in terms of gas saturation and up to 141% underestimation on cumulative hydrogen production. These observations illustrate the importance of using relative permeability curves characteristic of hydrogen-brine system for assessing the UHS performances.
Underground Hydrogen Storage: Integrated Surface Facilities and Fluid Flow Modelling for Depleted Gas Reservoirs
Aug 2023
Publication
We report a new techno-economic model to assess performance and capital costs for large-scale underground hydrogen storage in depleted gas reservoirs. A simulation toolbox is developed to model surface facilities and to simulate the hydrogen flow in geological formations in an integrated fashion.<br/>Integrated modelling revealed the following key insights: 1) A buffer system is highly desirable to absorb inherent variability in upstream hydrogen production; 2) hydrogen mixing with existing gases in the reservoir together with gravity segregation and diffusion results in a decline in hydrogen purity at the wellhead over time and can require increased purification; 3) the capital cost is dominated by the cost of cushion gas (hydrogen) and the compression system where about 9% of the total energy content of the hydrogen is consumed for compression. The scenarios modelled in our study result in a levelized cost of storage in Australia ranging from 2.3 to 4.29 A$/(kg).
Hydrogen Liquefaction: A Review of the Fundamental Physics, Engineering Practice and Future Opportunities
Apr 2022
Publication
Hydrogen is emerging as one of the most promising energy carriers for a decarbonised global energy system. Transportation and storage of hydrogen are critical to its large-scale adoption and to these ends liquid hydrogen is being widely considered. The liquefaction and storage processes must however be both safe and efficient for liquid hydrogen to be viable as an energy carrier. Identifying the most promising liquefaction processes and associated transport and storage technologies is therefore crucial; these need to be considered in terms of a range of interconnected parameters ranging from energy consumption and appropriate materials usage to considerations of unique liquid-hydrogen physics (in the form of ortho–para hydrogen conversion) and boil-off gas handling. This study presents the current state of liquid hydrogen technology across the entire value chain whilst detailing both the relevant underpinning science (e.g. the quantum behaviour of hydrogen at cryogenic temperatures) and current liquefaction process routes including relevant unit operation design and efficiency. Cognisant of the challenges associated with a projected hydrogen liquefaction plant capacity scale-up from the current 32 tonnes per day to greater than 100 tonnes per day to meet projected hydrogen demand this study also reflects on the next-generation of liquid-hydrogen technologies and the scientific research and development priorities needed to enable them.
A Review of Gas Phase Inhibition of Gaseous Hydrogen Embrittlement in Pipeline Steels
Feb 2024
Publication
The addition of small amounts of certain gases such as O2 CO and SO2 may mitigate hydrogen embrittlement in high-pressure gas transmission pipelines that transport hydrogen. To practically implement such inhibition in gas transmission pipelines a comprehensive understanding and quantification of this effect are essential. This review examines the impact of various added gases to hydrogen including typical odorants on gaseous hydrogen embrittlement of steels and evaluates their inhibition effectiveness. O2 CO and SO2 were found to be effective inhibitors of hydrogen embrittlement. Yet the results in the literature have not always been consistent partly because of the diverse range of mechanical tests and their parameters. The absence of systematic studies hinders the evaluation of the feasibility of using gas phase inhibitors for controlling gaseous hydrogen embrittlement. A method to quantify the effectiveness of gas phase inhibition is proposed using gas phase permeation studies.
Distributional Trends in the Generation and End-Use Sector of Low-Carbon Hydrogen Plants
Mar 2023
Publication
This paper uses established and recently introduced methods from the applied mathematics and statistics literature to study trends in the end-use sector and the capacity of low-carbon hydrogen projects in recent and upcoming decades. First we examine distributions in plants over time for various end-use sectors and classify them according to metric discrepancy observing clear similarity across all industry sectors. Next we compare the distribution of usage sectors between different continents and examine the changes in sector distribution over time. Finally we judiciously apply several regression models to analyse the association between various predictors and the capacity of global hydrogen projects. Across our experiments we see a welcome exponential growth in the capacity of zero-carbon hydrogen plants and significant growth of new and planned hydrogen plants in the 2020’s across every sector.
Greenhouse Gas Emissions Performance of Electric, Hydrogen and Fossil-Fuelled Freight Trucks with Uncertainty Estimates Using a Probabilistic Life-Cycle Assessment (pLCA)
Jan 2024
Publication
This research conducted a probabilistic life-cycle assessment (pLCA) into the greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions performance of nine combinations of truck size and powertrain technology for a recent past and a future (largely decarbonised) situation in Australia. This study finds that the relative and absolute life-cycle GHG emissions performance strongly depends on the vehicle class powertrain and year of assessment. Life-cycle emission factor distributions vary substantially in their magnitude range and shape. Diesel trucks had lower life-cycle GHG emissions in 2019 than electric trucks (battery hydrogen fuel cell) mainly due to the high carbon-emission intensity of the Australian electricity grid (mainly coal) and hydrogen production (mainly through steam–methane reforming). The picture is however very different for a more decarbonised situation where battery electric trucks in particular provide deep reductions (about 75–85%) in life-cycle GHG emissions. Fuel-cell electric (hydrogen) trucks also provide substantial reductions (about 50–70%) but not as deep as those for battery electric trucks. Moreover hydrogen trucks exhibit the largest uncertainty in emissions performance which reflects the uncertainty and general lack of information for this technology. They therefore carry an elevated risk of not achieving the expected emission reductions. Battery electric trucks show the smallest (absolute) uncertainty which suggests that these trucks are expected to deliver the deepest and most robust emission reductions. Operational emissions (on-road driving and vehicle maintenance combined) dominate life-cycle emissions for all vehicle classes. Vehicle manufacturing and upstream emissions make a relatively small contribution to life-cycle emissions from diesel trucks (
Fuelling the Future: An In-depth Review of Recent Trends, Challenges and Opportunities of Hydrogen Fuel Cell for a Sustainable Hydrogen Economy
Sep 2023
Publication
Hydrogen has gained tremendous momentum worldwide as an energy carrier to transit to a net zero emission energy sector. It has been widely adopted as a promising large-scale renewable energy (RE) storage solution to overcome RE resources’ variability and intermittency nature. The fuel cell (FC) technology became in focus within the hydrogen energy landscape as a cost-effective pathway to utilize hydrogen for power generation. Therefore FC technologies’ research and development (R&D) expanded into many pathways such as cost reduction efficiency improvement fixed and mobile applications lifetime safety and regulations etc. Many publications and industrial reports about FC technologies and applications are available. This raised the necessity for a holistic review study to summarize the state-of-the-art range of FC stacks such as manufacturing the balance of plant types technologies applications and R&D opportunities. At the beginning the principal technologies to compare the well known types followed by the FC operating parameters are presented. Then the FC balance of the plant i.e. building components and materials with its functionality and purpose types and applications are critically reviewed with their limitations and improvement opportunities. Subsequently the electrical properties of FCs with their key features including advantages and disadvantages were investigated. Applications of FCs in different sectors are elaborated with their key characteristics current status and future R&D opportunities. Economic attributes of fuel cells with a pathway towards low cost are also presented. Finally this study identifies the research gaps and future avenues to guide researchers and the hydrogen industry.
Green Energy Revolution and Substitution of Hydrocarbons with Hydrogen: Distribution Network Infrastructure Materials
Dec 2023
Publication
Global warming is an accepted fact of life on Earth posing grave consequences in the form of weather patterns with life-threatening outcomes for inhabitants and their cultures especially those of island countries. These wild and unpredictable weather patterns have persuaded authorities governments and industrial leaders to adapt a range of solutions to combat the temperature rise on Earth. One such solution is to abandon fossil fuels (hydrocarbons) for energy generation and employ renewable energy sources or at least use energy sources that do not generate greenhouse gases. One such energy carrier is hydrogen which is expected to slowly replace natural gas and will soon be pumped into the energy distribution pipeline network. Since the current energy distribution network was designed for hydrocarbons its use for hydrogen may pose some threat to the safety of urban society. This is the first time an overview article has examined the replacement of hydrocarbons by hydrogen from a totally different angle by incorporating material science viewpoints. This article discusses hydrogen properties and warns about the issue of hydrogen embrittlement in the current pipeline network if hydrogen is to be pumped through the current energy distribution network i.e. pipelines. It is recommended that sufficient study and research be planned and carried out to ensure the safety of using the current energy distribution network for hydrogen distribution and to set the necessary standards and procedures for future design and construction.
Shorter Message, Stronger Framing Increases Societal Acceptance for Hydrogen
Feb 2024
Publication
With the question of ‘can short messages be effective in increasing public support for a complex new technology (hydrogen)?‘ this study uses a representative national survey in Australia to analyze the differences and variations in subjective support for hydrogen in response to four differently framed short messages. The findings of this study show that short messages can increase social acceptance but the effects depend on how strongly the message is framed in terms of its alignment with either an economic or environmental values framework. Furthermore the effects depend on the social and cultural context of the receiver of the message.
Exploring Hydrogen Storage Potentital in Depleted Western Australian Hydrocarbon Reservoirs: A Petrophysical and Petrographic Analysis
Oct 2023
Publication
Hydrogen recognised as a clean and sustainable energy carrier with excellent transportation fuel properties drives numerous countries towards a hydrogen-based economy due to its high utilisation efficiency and minimal environmental impact. However the gaseous nature of hydrogen necessitates larger storage surface areas. Underground Hydrogen Storage (UHS) has emerged as a promising and efficient method to overcome this challenge. Currently only a handful of UHS locations exist globally due to the novelty of this field. With its abundant depleted hydrocarbon reservoirs boasting significant storage capacity Western Australia presents a suitable region for hydrogen storage. This paper comprehensively analyses petrophysical and petrographic characteristics employing XRD MIP and Micro-CT techniques on sandstone and claystone samples obtained from several fields in Western Australia. The suitability of these samples for hydrogen storage is evaluated based on mineral composition and porosity. The analysis reveals that more than 96% of Quartz is present in the sandstone samples. The claystone samples exhibit a mineral composition comprising Quartz Calcite K-feldspar Kaolinite Pyrite Albite and Muscovite. The study suggests that hydrogen storage in formation rock is favourable due to the low reactivity of hydrogen with silicate minerals but interactions with cap rock minerals should be considered. Micro-CT results indicate the connected porosity in the 17.23–4.67% range. Pore distribution in sandstones ranges from nanometers to millimetres with a substantial proportion of connected pores in the intermediate range which is conducive to hydrogen storage. This is particularly advantageous as the hydrogen-water system is highly water-wet with hydrogen primarily occupying medium and larger pores minimising hydrogen trapping. In claystone most pores were below 3 nm but instrumental constraints limited their quantification. In conclusion the petrophysical and petrographic analysis underscores the potential of Western Australian depleted hydrocarbon reservoirs for hydrogen storage. Understanding the mineralogical reactions with cap rock minerals is crucial while the favourable pore distribution in sandstones further supports the viability of hydrogen storage.
Decarbonizing Combustion with Hydrogen Blended Fuels: An Exploratory Study of Impact of Hydrogen on Hydrocarbon Autoignition
Jan 2024
Publication
Blending hydrogen to existing fuel mix represents a major opportunity for decarbonisation. One important consideration for this application is the chemical interaction between hydrogen and hydrocarbon fuels arising from their different combustion chemistries and varying considerably with combustion processes. This paper conducted an exploratory study of hydrogen’s impact on autoignition in several combustion processes where hydrogen is used as a blending component or the main fuel. Case studies are presented for spark ignition engines (H2/natural gas) compression ignition engines (H2/diesel) moderate or intense low-oxygen dilution (MILD) combustors (H2/natural gas) and rotational detonation engines (H2/natural gas). Autoignition reactivity as a function of the hydrogen blending level is investigated numerically using the ignition delay iso-contours and state-of-the-art kinetic models at time scales representative of each application. The results revealed drastically different impact of hydrogen blending on autoignition due to different reaction temperature pressure and time scale involved in these applications leaving hydrocarbon interacting with hydrogen at different ignition branches where the negative pressure/temperature dependency of oxidation kinetics could take place. The resulted non-linear and at times non-monotonic behaviours indicate a rich topic for combustion chemistry and also demonstrates ignition delay iso-contour as a useful tool to scope autoignition reactivity for a wide range of applications.
Green Hydrogen Credit Subsidized Renewable Energy-hydrogen Business Models for Achieving the Carbon Netural Future
Feb 2024
Publication
The global resurgence of hydrogen as a clean energy source particularly green hydrogen derived from renewable energy is pivotal for achieving a carbon-neutral future. However scalability poses a significant challenge. This research proposes innovative business models leveraging the low-emission property of green hydrogen to reduce its financial costs thereby fostering its widespread adoption. Key components of the business workflow are elaborated mathematical formulations of market parameters are derived and case studies are presented to demonstrate the feasibility and efficiency of these models. Results demonstrate that the substantial costs associated with the current hydrogen industry can be effectively subsidized via the implementation of proposed business models. When the carbon emission price falls within the range of approximately 86–105 USD/ton free access to hydrogen becomes a viable option for end-users. This highlights the significance and promising potential of the proposed business models within the green hydrogen credit framework.
Application and Limitations of Batteries and Hydrogen in Heavy Haul Rail using Australian Case Studies
Oct 2022
Publication
Decarbonisation of heavy haul rail is an essential contributor to a zero-emissions future. However the transition from diesel to battery locomotives is not always practical given the unique characteristics of each haul. This paper demonstrates the limitations of state-of-the-art batteries using real-world data from multiple locomotives operating in Australian rail freight. An energy model was developed to assess each route’s required energy and potential regenerated energy. The tractive and regenerative battery energy mass and cost were determined using data from the energy model coupled with battery specifications. The feasibility of implementing lithium iron phosphate (LFP) nickel manganese cobalt (NMC) and lithium titanium oxide (LTO) chemistries was explored based on cost energy density cycle lifespan and locomotive data. LFP was identified as the most suitable current battery solution based on current chemistries. Further examination of the energy demands and associated mass/volume constraints concluded that three platforms are required for heavy haul rail decarbonisation i) a battery electric locomotive for low-energy demands which can be coupled with either ii) a battery electric tender for medium energy demands or iii) a hydrogen fuel cell electric tender for higher energy demands. A future-looking techno-economic assessment of battery and hydrogen fuel cell platforms concludes that the lowest cost solution for low-energy hauls is a battery-only system and for high-energy hauls a battery-hydrogen system.
Technoeconomic Analysis for Green Hydrogen in Terms of Production, Compression, Transportation and Storage Considering the Australian Perspective
Jul 2023
Publication
This current article discusses the technoeconomics (TE) of hydrogen generation transportation compression and storage in the Australian context. The TE analysis is important and a prerequisite for investment decisions. This study selected the Australian context due to its huge potential in green hydrogen but the modelling is applicable to other parts of the world adjusting the price of electricity and other utilities. The hydrogen generation using the most mature alkaline electrolysis (AEL) technique was selected in the current study. The results show that increasing temperature from 50 to 90 ◦C and decreasing pressure from 13 to 5 bar help improve electrolyser performance though pressure has a minor effect. The selected range for performance parameters was based on the fundamental behaviour of water electrolysers supported with literature. The levelised cost of hydrogen (LCH2 ) was calculated for generation compression transportation and storage. However the majority of the LCH2 was for generation which was calculated based on CAPEX OPEX capital recovery factor hydrogen production rate and capacity factor. The LCH2 in 2023 was calculated to be 9.6 USD/kgH2 using a base-case solar electricity price of 65–38 USD/MWh. This LCH2 is expected to decrease to 6.5 and 3.4 USD/kgH2 by 2030 and 2040 respectively. The current LCH2 using wind energy was calculated to be 1.9 USD/kgH2 lower than that of solar-based electricity. The LCH2 using standalone wind electricity was calculated to be USD 5.3 and USD 2.9 in 2030 and 2040 respectively. The LCH2 predicted using a solar and wind mix (SWM) was estimated to be USD 3.2 compared to USD 9.6 and USD 7.7 using standalone solar and wind. The LCH2 under the best case was predicted to be USD 3.9 and USD 2.1 compared to USD 6.5 and USD 3.4 under base-case solar PV in 2030 and 2040 respectively. The best case SWM offers 33% lower LCH2 in 2023 which leads to 37% 39% and 42% lower LCH2 in 2030 2040 and 2050 respectively. The current results are overpredicted especially compared with CSIRO Australia due to the higher assumption of the renewable electricity price. Currently over two-thirds of the cost for the LCH2 is due to the price of electricity (i.e. wind and solar). Modelling suggests an overall reduction in the capital cost of AEL plants by about 50% in the 2030s. Due to the lower capacity factor (effective energy generation over maximum output) of renewable energy especially for solar plants a combined wind- and solar-based electrolysis plant was recommended which can increase the capacity factor by at least 33%. Results also suggest that besides generation at least an additional 1.5 USD/kgH2 for compression transportation and storage is required.
Geomechanics of Hydrogen Storage in a Depleted Gas Field
Feb 2024
Publication
We perform a simulation study of hydrogen injection in a depleted gas reservoir to assess the geomechanical impact of hydrogen storage relative to other commonly injected gases (methane CO2). A key finding is that the differences in hydrogen density compressibility viscosity and thermal properties compared to the other gases result in significantly less thermal perturbation at reservoir level. The risks of fault reactivation and wellbore fractures due to thermally-induced stress changes are significantly lower when storing hydrogen compared to results observed in CO2 scenarios. This implies that hydrogen injection and production has a much smaller geomechanical footprint with benefits for operational safety. We also find that use of nitrogen cushion gas ensures efficient deliverability and phase separation in the reservoir. However in this study a large fraction of cushion gas was back-produced in each cycle demonstrating the need for further studies of the surface processing requirements and economic implications.
Numerical Modelling of Hydrogen Release and Dispersion in Under-deck Compressed Hydrogen Storage of Marine Ships
Feb 2024
Publication
There is growing interest in using hydrogen (H2) as a marine fuel. Fire and explosion risks depend on hydrogen release and dispersion characteristics. Based on a validated Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) model this study performed hydrogen release and dispersion analysis on an under-deck compressed H2 storage system for a Live-Fish Carrier. A realistic under-deck H2 storage room was modelled based on the ship’s main dimensions and operational profile. Det Norske Veritas (DNV) Rules and Regulations for natural gas storage as a marine fuel were employed as base design guidelines. Case studies were developed to study the effect of two ceiling types (flat and slanted) in terms of flammable cloud formation and dissipation. During the leak’s duration it was found that the recommended ventilation rate was insufficient to dilute the average H2 concentration below 25% of the flammable range as required by DNV (1.2% required against 1.3% slanted and 1.4% flat). However after 35 s of gas extraction the H2 concentration was reduced to 0.5% and 0.6% in the slanted and flat cases respectively. The proposed methodology remains valid to improve the ventilation system and assess mitigation alternatives or other leakage scenarios in confined or semi-confined spaces containing compressed hydrogen gas.
Enabling Safe and Sustainable Hydrogen Mobility: Circular Economy-Driven Management of Hydrogen Vehicle Safety
Sep 2023
Publication
Hydrogen vehicles encompassing fuel cell electric vehicles (FCEVs) are pivotal within the UK’s energy landscape as it pursues the goal of net-zero emissions by 2050. By markedly diminishing dependence on fossil fuels FCEVs including hydrogen vehicles wield substantial influence in shaping the circular economy (CE). Their impact extends to optimizing resource utilization enabling zero-emission mobility facilitating the integration of renewable energy sources supplying adaptable energy storage solutions and interconnecting diverse sectors. The widespread adoption of hydrogen vehicles accelerates the UK’s transformative journey towards a sustainable CE. However to fully harness the benefits of this transition a robust investigation and implementation of safety measures concerning hydrogen vehicle (HV) use are indispensable. Therefore this study takes a holistic approach integrating quantitative risk assessment (QRA) and an adaptive decision-making trial and evaluation laboratory (DEMATEL) framework as pragmatic instruments. These methodologies ensure both the secure deployment and operational excellence of HVs. The findings underscore that the root causes of HV failures encompass extreme environments material defects fuel cell damage delivery system impairment and storage system deterioration. Furthermore critical driving factors for effective safety intervention revolve around cultivating a safety culture robust education/training and sound maintenance scheduling. Addressing these factors is pivotal for creating an environment conducive to mitigating safety and risk concerns. Given the intricacies of conducting comprehensive hydrogen QRAs due to the absence of specific reliability data this study dedicates attention to rectifying this gap. A sensitivity analysis encompassing a range of values is meticulously conducted to affirm the strength and reliability of our approach. This robust analysis yields precise dependable outcomes. Consequently decision-makers are equipped to discern pivotal underlying factors precipitating potential HV failures. With this discernment they can tailor safety interventions that lay the groundwork for sustainable resilient and secure HV operations. Our study navigates the intersection of HVs safety and sustainability amplifying their importance within the CE paradigm. Using the careful amalgamation of QRA and DEMATEL methodologies we chart a course towards empowering decision-makers with the insights to steer the hydrogen vehicle domain to safer horizons while ushering in an era of transformative eco-conscious mobility.
Work Efficiency and Economic Efficiency of Actual Driving Test of Proton Exchange Membrane Fuel Cell Forklift
Aug 2023
Publication
A 3.5 tonne forklift containing proton exchange membrane fuel cells (PEMFCs) and lithium-ion batteries was manufactured and tested in a real factory. The work efficiency and economic applicability of the PEMFC forklift were compared with that of a lithium-ion battery-powered forklift. The results showed that the back-pressure of air was closely related to the power density of the stack whose stability could be improved by a reasonable control strategy and membrane electrode assemblies (MEAs) with high consistency. The PEMFC powered forklift displayed 40.6% higher work efficiency than the lithium-ion battery-powered forklift. Its lower use-cost compared to internal engine-powered forklifts is beneficial to the commercialization of this product.
Towards Energy Freedom: Exploring Sustainable Solutions for Energy Independence and Self-sufficiency using Integrated Renewable Energy-driven Hydrogen System
Jan 2024
Publication
n the pursuit of sustainable energy solutions the integration of renewable energy sources and hydrogen technologies has emerged as a promising avenue. This paper introduces the Integrated Renewable Energy-Driven Hydrogen System as a holistic approach to achieve energy independence and self-sufficiency. Seamlessly integrating renewable energy sources hydrogen production storage and utilization this system enables diverse applications across various sectors. By harnessing solar and/or wind energy the Integrated Renewable EnergyDriven Hydrogen System optimizes energy generation distribution and storage. Employing a systematic methodology the paper thoroughly examines the advantages of this integrated system over other alternatives emphasizing its zero greenhouse gas emissions versatility energy resilience and potential for large-scale hydrogen production. Thus the proposed system sets our study apart offering a distinct and efficient alternative compared to conventional approaches. Recent advancements and challenges in hydrogen energy are also discussed highlighting increasing public awareness and technological progress. Findings reveal a payback period ranging from 2.8 to 6.7 years depending on the renewable energy configuration emphasizing the economic attractiveness and potential return on investment. This research significantly contributes to the ongoing discourse on renewable energy integration and underscores the viability of the Integrated Renewable EnergyDriven Hydrogen System as a transformative solution for achieving energy independence. The employed model is innovative and transferable to other contexts.
Renewable Hydrogen Standards, Certifications, and Labels: A State-of-the-art Review from a Sustainability Systems Governance Perspective
Feb 2024
Publication
A range of existing and newly developed hydrogen standards certification and labelling (SCL) schemes aim to promote the role of ‘renewable’ ‘clean’ or ‘green’ hydrogen in decarbonising energy transitions. This paper analyses a sample of these SCLs to assess their role in the scaling up of renewable hydrogen and its derivatives. To analyse these hydrogen SCLs we embellish a novel conceptual framework that brings together Sustainability Systems Thinking and Governance (SSG) literatures. The results reveal noteworthy scheme differences in motivation approach criteria and governance; highlighting the complex interconnected and dynamic reality within which energy systems are embedded. We consider whether the sustainable utilisation of renewable hydrogen is well-served by the proliferation of SCLs and recommend an SSG-informed approach. An SSG approach will better promote collaboration towards an authoritative global multistakeholder compromise on hydrogen certification that balances economic considerations with social and environmental dimensions.
Split Injection Strategies for a High-pressure Hydrogen Direct Injection in a Small-bore Dual-fuel Diesel Engine
Jan 2024
Publication
Hydrogen-diesel dual direct-injection (H2DDI) engines present a promising pathway towards cleaner and more efficient transportation. In this study hydrogen split injection strategies were explored in an automotive-size single-cylinder compression ignition (CI) engine with a focus on varying the injection timings and energy fractions. The engine was operated at an intermediate load with fixed combustion phasing through adjustments of pilot diesel injection timing. An energy substitution principle guided the variation in energy fraction between the two hydrogen injections and then diesel injection while keeping the total energy input constant. The findings demonstrate that early first hydrogen injection timings lead to characteristics indicative of premixed combustion reflecting a high homogeneity of the hydrogen-air mixture. In contrast hydrogen stratification levels were predominantly influenced by later second injection timings with mixing-controlled combustion behaviour apparent for very late injections near top dead centre or when the second hydrogen injection held high energy fractions which led to decreased nitrogen oxides (NOx: NO and NO2) emissions. The carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions did not show high sensitivity to the hydrogen split injection strategies exhibiting about 77 % reduction compared to the diesel baseline due primarily to increased hydrogen energy fraction of up to 90 %
Advancing a Hydrogen Economy in Australia: Public Perceptions and Aspirations
Nov 2023
Publication
Supporters of hydrogen energy urge scaling up technology and reducing costs for competitiveness. This paper explores how hydrogen energy technologies (HET) are perceived by Australia’s general population and considers the way members of the public imagine their role in the implementation of hydrogen energy now and into the future. The study combines a nationally representative survey (n = 403) and semi-structured interviews (n = 30). Results show age and gender relationships with self-reported hydrogen knowledge. Half of the participants obtained hydrogen information from televised media. Strong support was observed for renewable hydrogen while coal (26%) and natural gas (41%) versions had less backing. Participants sought more safety-related information (41% expressed concern). Most felt uncertain about influencing hydrogen decisions and did not necessarily recognise they had agency beyond their front fence. Exploring the link between political identity and agency in energy decision-making is needed with energy democracy a potentially productive direction.
Upcycling of Plastic Wastes for Hydrogen Production: Advances and Perspectives
Feb 2024
Publication
The abundant plastic wastes become an imperative global issue and how to handle these organic wastes gains growing scientific and industrial interest. Recently converting plastic wastes into hydrogen fuel has been investigated and the “waste-to-value” practice accelerates the circular economy. To accelerate the development of plastic-to-hydrogen conversion in this review recent advances in plastic-to-hydrogen conversion via thermochemical photocatalytic and electrocatalytic routes are analyzed. All of the thermo- photo- and electrochemical processes can transform different plastic wastes into hydrogen and the hydrogen production efficiency depends heavily on the selected techniques operating parameters and applied catalysts. The application of rational-designed catalysts can promote the selective production of hydrogen from plastic feedstocks. Further studies on process optimization cost-effective catalyst design and mechanism investigation are needed.
Hydrogen-Powered Aircraft at Airports: A Review of the Infrastructure Requirements and Planning Challenges
Nov 2023
Publication
Hydrogen-fueled aircraft are a promising innovation for a sustainable future in aviation. While hydrogen aircraft design has been widely studied research on airport requirements for new infrastructure associated with hydrogen-fueled aircraft and its integration with existing facilities is scarce. This study analyzes the current body of knowledge and identifies the planning challenges which need to be overcome to enable the operation of hydrogen flights at airports. An investigation of the preparation of seven major international airports for hydrogen-powered flights finds that although there is commitment airports are not currently prepared for hydrogen-based flights. Major adjustments are required across airport sites covering land use plans airside development utility infrastructure development and safety security and training. Developments are also required across the wider aviation industry including equipment updates such as for refueling and ground support and supportive policy and regulations for hydrogen-powered aircraft. The next 5–10 years is identified from the review as a critical time period for airports given that the first commercial hydrogen-powered flight is likely to depart in 2026 and that the next generation of short-range hydrogen-powered aircraft is predicted to enter service between 2030 and 2035.
Renewable Hydrogen Requirements and Impacts for Network Balancing: A Queensland Cae Study
Dec 2023
Publication
Hydrogen is the gas of the moment: an abundant element that can be created using renewable energy transported in gaseous or liquid form and offering the ability to provide energy with only water vapour as an emission. Hydrogen can also be used in a fuel blend in electricity generation gas turbines providing a low carbon option for providing the peak electricity to cover high demand and firming.<br/>While the electricity grid is itself transforming to decarbonising hard-to-abate industries such as cement and bauxite refineries are slower to reduce emissions constrained by their high temperature process requirements. Hydrogen offers a solution allowing onsite production process heat with waste heat recovery supporting blended gas turbine generation for onsite electricity supply.<br/>This article builds on decarbonisation pathway simulation results from an ANEM model of the electricity grid identifying the amount of peak demand energy required from gas turbines. The research then examines the quantity flow rate storage requirements and emissions reduction if this peak generation were supplied by open cycle hydrogen capable gas turbines.
A Power Dispatch Allocation Strategy to Produce Green Hydrogen in a Grid-integrated Offshore Hybrid Energy System
Mar 2024
Publication
A dedicated grid-tied offshore hybrid energy system for hydrogen production is a promising solution to unlock the full benefit of offshore wind and solar energy and realize decarbonization and sustainable energy security targets in electricity and other sectors. Current knowledge of these offshore hybrid systems is limited particularly in the integration component control and allocation aspects. Therefore a grid-integrated analytical model with a power dispatch allocation strategy between the grid and electrolyzer for the co-production of hydrogen from the offshore hybrid energy system is developed in this paper. While producing hydrogen the proposed offshore hybrid energy system supplies a percentage of its capacity to the onshore grid facility and the amount of the electricity is quantified based on the electricity market price and available total offshore generation. The detailed controls of each component are discussed. A case study considers a hypothetical hybrid offshore energy system of 10 MW situated in a potential offshore off the NSW of Australia based on realistic metrological data. A grid-scale proton-exchange membrane electrolyzer stack is used and a model predictive power controller is implemented on the distributed hydrogen generation scheme. The model is helpful for the assessment or optimization of both the economics and feasibility of the dedicated offshore hybrid energy farm for hydrogen production systems.
Strategies for Life Cycle Impact Reduction of Green Hydrogen Production - Influence of Electrolyser Value Chain Design
Mar 2024
Publication
Green Hydrogen (H2 via renewable-driven electrolysis) is emerging as a vector to meet net-zero emission targets provided it is produced with a low life cycle impact. While certification schemes for green H2 have been introduced they mainly focus on the embodied emissions from energy supply during electrolyser operation. This narrow focus on just operation is an oversight considering that a complete green H2 value chain also includes the electrolyser’s manufacturing transport/installation and end-of-life. Each step of this chain involves materials and energy flows that impart impacts that undermine the clean and sustainable status of H2. Therefore holistic and harmonised assessments of the green H2 production chain are required to ensure both economic and environmental deployment of H2. Herein we conduct an overarching environmental assessment encompassing the production chain described above using Australia as a case study. Our results indicate that while the energy source has the most impact material and manufacturing inputs associated with electrolyser production are increasingly significant as the scale of H2 output expands. Moreover wind power electrolysis has a greater chance of achieving green H2 certification compared to solar powered while increasing the amount of localised manufactured content and investment in end-of-life recycling of electrolyser components can reduce the overall life cycle impact of green H2 production by 20%.
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