Switzerland
Lab-Scale Investigation of the Integrated Backup/Storage System for Wind Turbines Using Alkaline Electrolyzer
Apr 2023
Publication
The depletion of fossil fuel sources has encouraged the authorities to use renewable resources such as wind energy to generate electricity. A backup/storage system can improve the performance of wind turbines due to fluctuations in power demand. The novelty of this study is to utilize a hybrid system for a wind farm using the excess electricity generated by the wind turbines to produce hydrogen in an alkaline electrolyzer (AEL). The hydrogen storage tank stores the produced hydrogen and provides hydrogen to the proton-exchange membrane fuel cell (PEMFC) to generate electricity once the power demand is higher than the electricity generated by the wind turbines. The goal of this study is to use the wind profile of a region in Iran namely the Cohen region to analyze the performance of the suggested integrated system on a micro scale. The output results of this study can be used as a case study for construction in the future based on the exact specification of NTK300 wind turbines. The results indicate that with the minimum power supply of 30 kW from the wind turbines on a lab scale the generated power by the PEMFC will be 1008 W while the maximum generated hydrogen will be 304 mL/h.
Decarbonisation of Geographical Islands and the Feasibility of Green Hydrogen Production Using Excess Electricity
May 2023
Publication
Islands face limitations in producing and transporting energy due to their geographical constraints. To address this issue the ROBINSON project funded by the EU aims to create a flexible self-sufficient and environmentally friendly energy system that can be used on isolated islands. The feasibility of renewable electrification and heating system decarbonization of Eigerøy in Norway is described in this article. A mixed-integer linear programming framework was used for modelling. The optimization method is designed to be versatile and adaptable to suit individual scenarios with a flexible and modular formulation that can accommodate boundary conditions specific to each case. Onshore and offshore wind farms and utility-scale photovoltaic (PV) were considered to generate renewable electricity. Each option was found to be feasible under certain conditions. The heating system composed of a biomass gasifier a combined heat and power system with a gas boiler as backup unit was also analyzed. Parameters were identified in which the combination of all three thermal units represented the best system option. In addition the possibility of green hydrogen production based on the excess electricity from each scenario was evaluated.
Hydrogen Production, Storage, Utilisation and Environmental Impacts: A Review
Oct 2021
Publication
Dihydrogen (H2) commonly named ‘hydrogen’ is increasingly recognised as a clean and reliable energy vector for decarbonisation and defossilisation by various sectors. The global hydrogen demand is projected to increase from 70 million tonnes in 2019 to 120 million tonnes by 2024. Hydrogen development should also meet the seventh goal of ‘affordable and clean energy’ of the United Nations. Here we review hydrogen production and life cycle analysis hydrogen geological storage and hydrogen utilisation. Hydrogen is produced by water electrolysis steam methane reforming methane pyrolysis and coal gasification. We compare the environmental impact of hydrogen production routes by life cycle analysis. Hydrogen is used in power systems transportation hydrocarbon and ammonia production and metallugical industries. Overall combining electrolysis-generated hydrogen with hydrogen storage in underground porous media such as geological reservoirs and salt caverns is well suited for shifting excess of-peak energy to meet dispatchable on-peak demand.
Kilowatt-scale Solar Hydrogen Production System Using a Concentrated Integrated Photoelectrochemical Device
Apr 2023
Publication
The production of synthetic fuels and chemicals from solar energy and abundant reagents offers a promising pathway to a sustainable fuel economy and chemical industry. For the production of hydrogen photoelectrochemical or integrated photovoltaic and electrolysis devices have demonstrated outstanding performance at the lab scale but there remains a lack of larger-scale on-sun demonstrations (>100 W). Here we present the successful scaling of a thermally integrated photoelectrochemical device—utilizing concentrated solar irradiation— to a kW-scale pilot plant capable of co-generation of hydrogen and heat. A solar-to-hydrogen device-level efficiency of greater than 20% at an H2 production rate of >2.0 kW (>0.8 g min−1) is achieved. A validated model-based optimization highlights the dominant energetic losses and predicts straightforward strategies to improve the system-level efficiency of >5.5% towards the device-level efficiency. We identify solutions to the key technological challenges control and operation strategies and discuss the future outlook of this emerging technology.
How Company History and Hydrogen Type Shape Public Trust and Acceptability: A Reputation Management Perspective
Aug 2025
Publication
Hydrogen is gaining interest as a clean energy source from both governments and fossil fuel companies. For hydrogen projects to succeed securing public acceptability is crucial with trust in the implementing actors playing a central role. Drawing from reputation management and attribution theory we experimentally evaluated whether people’s perceptions of energy companies wanting to start producing hydrogen for sustainability reasons differ based on two features of hydrogen production. Specifically we examined the influence of (1) the type of hydrogen (blue versus green) and (2) the energy company’s history in energy production (fossil fuels versus renewables) on perceptions about the companies’ reputation management efforts —that is the belief that companies adopt hydrogen primarily to improve their public image— as well as on levels of trust both overall and specifically in terms of integrity and competence. We further explored whether perceived reputation management explains the effects on trust and whether these factors also shape public acceptability of hydrogen production itself. Results indicated that people perceived the company with a history of working with fossil fuels as trying to improve its reputation more than one associated with renewables and trusted it less. Furthermore perceived reputation management explained the lower (general and integrity-based) trust people had in companies with a past in fossil fuels. For public acceptability of hydrogen the company’s history was not relevant with green hydrogen being more acceptable than blue regardless of which company produced it. We discuss these findings in relation to the literature on public perceptions of hydrogen.
Reviewing Sector Coupling in Offshore Energy System Integration Modelling: The North Sea Context
Dec 2024
Publication
Offshore energy system integration is particularly important for realising a rapid and cost-effective low-carbon energy transition in the North Sea region. Effective implementation of strategies that require collaboration be tween countries developers and operators must be underpinned by robust and comprehensive modelling results. Intra-system interactions and diversity of sectors needed to facilitate the energy transition must be adequately captured within whole-system models. Historically consideration of the offshore energy environment within macro-scale models has been supplementary to the onshore system. However increased deployment of offshore wind focus on geological storage for energy security and technological development and investment in hydrogen and carbon storage projects highlights the importance of expanding the role of the offshore system within modelling. This study presents a comprehensive investigation of energy system integration challenges within offshore system modelling and how these define the requirements of the employed methodology. The findings suggest large-scale offshore system modelling studies typically include few energy vectors limited spatial resolution and simplified network flow characteristics. Despite the North Sea focus these challenges reflect fundamental barriers within large-scale offshore energy system modelling and thus extend to similar offshore contexts globally. Key approaches are identified to maximise sectoral and technological diversity while maintaining sufficient temporal and spatial resolution to suitably represent the evolving offshore system are identified. We make concrete suggestions for future work in this field based on identified best practice among the reviewed literature.
Experimental Investigation on the Optimal Injection and Combustion Phasing for a Direct Injection Hydrogen-fuelled Internal Combustion Engine for Heavy-duty Applications
Dec 2024
Publication
In the current context of increasing demand for clean transportation hydrogen usage in internal combustion engines (ICEs) represents a viable solution to abate all engine-out criteria pollutants and almost zeroing CO2 tailpipe emissions. Indeed the wider flammability limits thanks to the higher flame propagation speed and the lower minimum ignition energy compared with conventional fuels extend the stable combustion regime to leaner mixtures thus allowing high thermal efficiency keeping under control the NOX emissions. To fully exploit the potential of hydrogen as a fuel and to avoid undesired abnormal combustion processes a deep characterization of the combustion process is needed. With this aim a 6-cylinder 12.9-L heavy-duty engine was converted from a port-fuel injected compressed natural gas to a direct injected hydrogen spark ignition one. A wide experimental campaign was carried out consisting of several sweeps of relative air-fuel ratios spark advances and injection timings at different engine speeds and loads aiming to define a preliminary engine map. The effect of each calibration parameter at different engine load and speed has been analyzed through the combination of relevant combustion parameters as well as NOX emissions. The results have demonstrated the critical influence of the mixture inhomogeneity when the injection is retarded through the top dead center firing as indicated by the increase in NOX emissions and combustion variability. The analysis of the combustion timing has indicated the dependence of the optimal MFB50 on the relative air-fuel ratio. Lastly the analysis of 200 consecutive cycles for each operating condition has allowed the evaluation of the influence of the main calibration parameters on the cyclic variability thus providing further insights about the lean limit of hydrogen in ICE.
European Hydrogen Train the Trainer Programme for Responders: The Impact of HyResponder on Training Across Europe
Jan 2025
Publication
Síle Brennan,
Christian Brauner,
Dennis Davis,
Natalie DeBacker,
Alexander Dyck,
César García Hernández,
André Vagner Gaathaug,
Petr Kupka,
Laurence Grand-Clement,
Etienne Havret,
Deborah Houssin-Agbomson,
Laurent Lecomte,
Eric Maranne,
Pippa Steele,
Paola Russo,
Adolfo Pinilla,
Gerhard Schoepf,
Tom Van Esbroeck and
Vladimir V. Molkov
The impact of the HyResponder project on the training of responders in 10 European countries is described. An overview is presented of training activities undertaken within the project in Austria Belgium Czech Republic France Germany Italy Norway Spain Switzerland and the United Kingdom. National leads with training expertise are given and the longer-term plans in each region are mentioned. Responders from each region took part in a specially tailored “train the trainer” programme and then delivered training within their regions. A flexible approach to training within the HyResponder network has enabled fit for purpose region appropriate activities to be delivered impacting over 1250 individuals during the project and many more beyond. Teaching and learning materials in hydrogen safety for responders have been made available in 8 languages: English Czech Dutch French German Italian Norwegian Spanish. They are being used to inform training within each of the partner countries. Dedicated national working groups focused on hydrogen safety training for responders have been established in Belgium the Czech Republic Italy and Switzerland.
Environmental Implications of Solid Oxide Fuel Cell System for Hydrogen Sustainability
Jan 2025
Publication
Hydrogen known for its high energy content and clean combustion is promising in the energy transition. This study explores the environmental impact of a solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC) system. 1 kg of hydrogen production at 1 bar serves as the functional unit. The SOFC system generates hydrogen electricity and heat across five modes. Results indicate that the SOFC system achieves a global warming potential of 0.17–9.50 kg CO2 -eq/FU using the system expansion method. Regional analysis shows that areas with high renewable electricity shares experience increased CO2 emissions due to functional unit decision. The exergy allocation method is less sensitive to electricity sources and seasonal emission profiles than system expansion. Comparing eight production routes the SOFC system using biomethane (−5.46 kg CO2 -eq/FU) outperforms steam methane reforming (11 kg CO2 -eq/FU) and biomass gasification (1.49 kg CO2 -eq/FU). These insights are valuable for advancing renewable energy initiatives and effectively mitigating climate change.
Global Land and Water Limits to Electrolytic Hydrogen Production Using Wind and Solar Resources
Sep 2023
Publication
Proposals for achieving net-zero emissions by 2050 include scaling-up electrolytic hydrogen production however this poses technical economic and environmental challenges. One such challenge is for policymakers to ensure a sustainable future for the environment including freshwater and land resources while facilitating low-carbon hydrogen production using renewable wind and solar energy. We establish a country-by-country reference scenario for hydrogen demand in 2050 and compare it with land and water availability. Our analysis highlights countries that will be constrained by domestic natural resources to achieve electrolytic hydrogen self-sufficiency in a net-zero target. Depending on land allocation for the installation of solar panels or wind turbines less than 50% of hydrogen demand in 2050 could be met through a local production without land or water scarcity. Our findings identify potential importers and exporters of hydrogen or conversely exporters or importers of industries that would rely on electrolytic hydrogen. The abundance of land and water resources in Southern and Central-East Africa West Africa South America Canada and Australia make these countries potential leaders in hydrogen export.
Energy Management of Hydrogen Hybrid Electric Vehicles - A Potential Analysis
Jan 2024
Publication
The hydrogen combustion engine (H2 ICE) is known to be able to burn H2 producing no CO2 emissions and extremely low engine-out NOeo emissions. In this work the potential to reduce the NOeo emissions through the implementation of electric hybridization of an H2 ICE-equipped passenger car (H2 -HEV) combined with a dedicated energy management system (EMS) is discussed. Achieving a low H2 consumption and low NOeo emissions are conflicting objectives the trade-off of which depends on the EMS and can be represented as a Pareto front. The dynamic programming algorithm is used to calculate the Pareto-optimal EMS calibrations for various driving missions. Through the utilization of a dedicated energy management calibration H2 -HEVs exhibit the potential to decrease the NOeo x emissions by more than 90% while decreasing the H2 consumption by over 16% compared to a comparable non-hybridized H2 -vehicle. The present paper represents the initial potential analysis suggesting that H2 -HEVs are a viable option towards a CO2 -free mobility with extremely low NOeo emissions.
The Long Term Price Elastic Demand of Hydrogen - A Multi-model Analysis for Germany
May 2024
Publication
Hydrogen and its derivatives are important components to achieve climate policy goals especially in terms of greenhouse gas neutrality. There is an ongoing controversial debate about the applications in which hydrogen and its derivatives should be used and to what extent. Typically the estimation of hydrogen demand relies on scenario-based analyses with varying underlying assumptions and targets. This study establishes a new framework consisting of existing energy system simulation and optimisation models in order to assess the long-term price-elastic demand of hydrogen. The aim of this work is to shift towards an analysis of the hydrogen demand that is primarily driven by its price. This is done for the case of Germany because of the expected high hydrogen demand for the years 2025–2045. 15 wholesale price pathways were established with final prices in 2045 between 56 €/MWh and 182 €/MWh. The results suggest that – if climate targets are to be achieved - even with high hydrogen prices (252 €/MWh in 2030 and 182 €/MWh in 2045) a significant hydrogen demand in the industry sector and the energy conversion sector is expected to emerge (318 TWh). Furthermore the energy conversion sector has a large share of price sensitive hydrogen demand and therefore its demand strongly increases with lower prices. The road transportation sector will only play a small role in terms of hydrogen demand if prices are low. In the decentralised heating for buildings no relevant demand will be seen over the considered price ranges whereas the centralised supply of heat via heat grids increases as prices fall.
Future Hydrogen Economies Imply Environmental Trade-offs and a Supply-demand Mismatch
Aug 2024
Publication
Hydrogen will play a key role in decarbonizing economies. Here we quantify the costs and environmental impacts of possible large-scale hydrogen economies using four prospective hydrogen demand scenarios for 2050 ranging from 111–614 megatonne H2 year−1 . Our findings confirm that renewable (solar photovoltaic and wind) electrolytic hydrogen production generates at least 50–90% fewer greenhouse gas emissions than fossil-fuel-based counterparts without carbon capture and storage. However electrolytic hydrogen production could still result in considerable environmental burdens which requires reassessing the concept of green hydrogen. Our global analysis highlights a few salient points: (i) a mismatch between economical hydrogen production and hydrogen demand across continents seems likely; (ii) regionspecific limitations are inevitable since possibly more than 60% of large hydrogen production potentials are concentrated in water-scarce regions; and (iii) upscaling electrolytic hydrogen production could be limited by renewable power generation and natural resource potentials.
Hydrogen Refuelling Station Calibration with a Traceable Gravimetric Standard
Apr 2020
Publication
Of all the alternatives to hydrocarbon fuels hydrogen offers the greatest long-term potential to radically reduce the many problems inherent in fuel used for transportation. Hydrogen vehicles have zero tailpipe emissions and are very efficient. If the hydrogen is made from renewable sources such as nuclear power or fossil sources with carbon emissions captured and sequestered hydrogen use on a global scale would produce almost zero greenhouse gas emissions and greatly reduce air pollutant emissions. The aim of this work is to realise a traceability chain for hydrogen flow metering in the range typical for fuelling applications in a wide pressure range with pressures up to 875 bar (for Hydrogen Refuelling Station - HRS with Nominal Working Pressure of 700 bar) and temperature changes from −40 °C (pre-cooling) to 85 °C (maximum allowed vehicle tank temperature) in accordance with the worldwide accepted standard SAE J2601. Several HRS have been tested in Europe (France Netherlands and Germany) and the results show a good repeatability for all tests. This demonstrates that the testing equipment works well in real conditions. Depending on the installation configuration some systematic errors have been detected and explained. Errors observed for Configuration 1 stations can be explained by pressure differences at the beginning and end of fueling in the piping between the Coriolis Flow Meter (CFM) and the dispenser: the longer the distance the bigger the errors. For Configuration 2 where this distance is very short the error is negligible.
Advantages and Technological Progress of Hydrogen Fuel Cell Vehicles
Jun 2023
Publication
The automotive industry is undergoing a profound transformation driven by the need for sustainable and environmentally friendly transportation solutions [1]. In this context fuel cell technology has emerged as a promising alternative offering clean efficient and high-performance power sources for vehicles [2]. Fuel cell vehicles are electric vehicles that use fuel cell systems as a single power source or as a hybrid power source in combination with rechargeable energy storage systems. A typical fuel cell system for electric vehicle is exhibited in Figure 1 which provides a comprehensive demonstration of this kind of complex system. Hydrogen energy is a crucial field in the new energy revolution and will become a key pillar in building a green efficient and secure new energy system. As a critical field for hydrogen utilization fuel cell vehicles will play an important role in the transformation and development of the automotive industry. The development of fuel cell vehicles offers numerous advantages such as strong power outputs safety reliability and economic energy savings [3]. However improvements must urgently be made in existing technologies such as fuel cell stacks (including proton exchange membranes catalysts gas diffusion layers and bipolar plates) compressors and onboard hydrogen storage systems [4]. The advantages and current technological status are analyzed here.
Macroeconomic Analysis of a New Green Hydrogen Industry using Input-output Analysis: The Case of Switzerland
Sep 2023
Publication
Hydrogen is receiving increasing attention to decarbonize hard-to-abate sectors such as carbon intensive industries and long-distance transport with the ultimate goal of reducing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions to net-zero. However limited knowledge exists so far on the socio-economic and environmental impacts for countries moving towards green hydrogen. Here we analyse the macroeconomic impacts both direct and indirect in terms of GDP growth employment generation and GHG emissions of green hydrogen production in Switzerland. The results are first presented in gross terms for the construction and operation of a new green hydrogen industry considering that all the produced hydrogen is allocated to passenger cars (final demand). We find that for each kg of green hydrogen produced the operational phase creates 6.0 5.9 and 9.5 times more GDP employment and GHG emissions respectively compared to the construction phase (all values in gross terms). Additionally the net impacts are calculated by assuming replacement of diesel by green hydrogen as fuel for passenger cars. We find that green hydrogen contributes to a higher GDP and employment compared to diesel while reducing GHG emissions. For instance in all the three cases namely ‘Equal Cost’ ‘Equal Energy’ and ‘Equal Service’ we find that a green hydrogen industry generates around 106% 28% and 45% higher GDP respectively; 163% 43% and 65% more full-time equivalent jobs respectively; and finally 45% 18% and 29% lower GHG emissions respectively compared to diesel and other industries. Finally the methodology developed in this study can be extended to other countries using country-specific data.
Suitability and Energy Sustainability of Atmospheric Water Generation Technology for Green Hydrogen Production
Sep 2023
Publication
This research investigated the suitability of air-to-water generator (AWG) technology to address one of the main concerns in green hydrogen production namely water supply. This study specifically addresses water quality and energy sustainability issues which are crucial research questions when AWG technology is intended for electrolysis. To this scope a reasoned summary of the main findings related to atmospheric water quality has been provided. Moreover several experimental chemical analyses specifically focused on meeting electrolysis process requirements on water produced using a real integrated AWG system equipped with certified materials for food contact were discussed. To assess the energy sustainability of AWGs in green hydrogen production a case study was presented regarding an electrolyzer plant intended to serve as energy storage for a 2 MW photovoltaic field on Iriomote Island. The integrated AWG used for the water quality analyses was studied in order to determine its performance in the specific island climate conditions. The production exceeded the needs of the electrolyzer; thus the overproduction was considered for the panels cleaning due to the high purity of the water. Due to such an operation the efficiency recovery was more than enough to cover the AWG energy consumption. This paper on the basis of the quantity results provides the first answers to the said research questions concerning water quality and energy consumption establishing the potential of AWG as a viable solution for addressing water scarcity and enhancing the sustainability of electrolysis processes in green hydrogen production.
Grid-neutral Hydrogen Mobility: Dynamic Modelling and Techno-economic Assessment of a Renewable-powered Hydrogen Plant
Jun 2024
Publication
The seasonally varying potential to produce electricity from renewable sources such as wind PV and hydropower is a challenge for the continuous supply of hydrogen for transport and mobility. Seasonal storage of energy allows to avoid the use of grid electricity when it is scarce; storage systems can thus increase the resilience of the energy system. For grid-neutral and renewable hydrogen production an electrolyser is considered together with a Power-to-Gas seasonal storage system which consists of a methanation the gas grid as intermediate storage and a steam reformer. As feed stream electricity from an own photovoltaic (PV) system is considered and for some cases additional electricity from the grid or from a wind turbine. The dynamic operation of the plant during a year is simulated. It is possible to safely supply fuel cell vehicles with hydrogen from the grid-neutral plant without using electricity when it is scarce and expensive. To supply 135 kgH2/day unit sizes of 1 MW–2.9 MW for the PV system and 0.9 MW–2.6 MW for the electrolysis are required depending on the amount of available grid-electricity. The usage of grid-electricity increases the capacity factor of the electrolysis which results in decreased unit sizes and in a better economic performance. Seasonal storage of energy is required which results in an increased hydrogen production in summer of approximately 50% more than directly needed by the fuel cell vehicles. The overall efficiency from electricity to hydrogen is decreased due to the storage path by 10%-points to 56% based on the higher heating value. Assuming a cost-equivalent hydrogen price per driven kilometre in comparison to the actual diesel price and electricity costs of 10 Ct/kWhel from the grid the revenues of the system are higher than the operating costs.
Design of Gravimetric Primary Standards for Field-testing of Hydrogen Refuelling Stations
Apr 2020
Publication
The Federal Institute of Metrology METAS developed a Hydrogen Field Test Standard (HFTS) that can be used for field verification and calibration of hydrogen refuelling stations. The testing method is based on the gravimetric principle. The experimental design of the HFTS as well as the description of the method are presented here.
The Role of Hydrogen Storage in an Electricity System with Large Hydropower Resources
Feb 2024
Publication
Hydrogen is considered one of the key pillars of an effective decarbonization strategy of the energy sector; however the potential of hydrogen as an electricity storage medium is debated. This paper investigates the role of hydrogen as an electricity storage medium in an electricity system with large hydropower resources focusing on the Swiss electricity sector. Several techno-economic and climate scenarios are considered. Findings suggest that hydrogen storage plays no major role under most conditions because of the large hydropower resources. More specifically no hydrogen storage is installed in Switzerland if today’s values of net-transfer capacities and low load-shedding costs are assumed. This applies even to hydrogen-favorable climate scenarios (dry years with low precipitation and dam inflows) and economic assumptions (high learning rates for hydrogen technologies). In contrast hydrogen storage is installed when net-transfer capacities between countries are reduced below 30% of current values and load-shedding costs are above 1000 EUR/MWh. When installed hydrogen is deployed in a few large-scale installations near the national borders.
Understanding Degradation Effects of Elevated Temperature Operating Conditions in Polymer Electrolyte Water Electrolyzers
Apr 2021
Publication
The cost of polymer electrolyte water electrolysis (PEWE) is dominated by the price of electricity used to power the water splitting reaction. We present a liquid water fed polymer electrolyte water electrolyzer cell operated at a cell temperature of 100 °C in comparison to a cell operated at state-of-the-art operation temperature of 60 °C over a 300 h constant current period. The hydrogen conversion efficiency increases by up to 5% at elevated temperature and makes green hydrogen cheaper. However temperature is a stress factor that accelerates degradation causes in the cell. The PEWE cell operated at a cell temperature of 100 °C shows a 5 times increased cell voltage loss rate compared to the PEWE cell at 60 °C. The initial performance gain was found to be consumed after a projected operation time of 3500 h. Elevated temperature operation is only viable if a voltage loss rate of less than 5.8 μV h−1 can be attained. The major degradation phenomena that impact performance loss at 100 °C are ohmic (49%) and anode kinetic losses (45%). Damage to components was identified by post-test electron-microscopic analysis of the catalyst coated membrane and measurement of cation content in the drag water. The chemical decomposition of the ionomer increases by a factor of 10 at 100 °C vs 60 °C. Failure by short circuit formation was estimated to be a failure mode after a projected lifetime 3700 h. At elevated temperature and differential pressure operation hydrogen gas cross-over is limiting since a content of 4% hydrogen in oxygen represents the lower explosion limit.
Hydrogen in Natural Gas Grids: Prospects and Recommendations About Gas Flow Meters
Aug 2024
Publication
To inject green hydrogen (H2) into the existing natural gas (NG) infrastructure is one way to decarbonize the European energy system. However asset readiness is necessary to be successful. Preliminary analysis and experimental results about the compatibility of hydrogen and natural gas mixtures (H2NG) with the actual gas grids make the scientific community confident about the feasibility. Nevertheless specific technical questions need more research. A significant topic of debate is the impact of H2NG mixtures on the performance of state-ofthe-art fiscal measuring devices which are essential for accurate billing. Identifying and addressing any potential degradation in their metrological performance due to H2NG is critical for decision-making. However the literature lacks data about the gas meters’ technologies currently installed in the NG grids such as a comprehensive overview of their readiness at different concentrations while data are fragmented among different sources. This paper addresses these gaps by analyzing the main characteristics and categorizing more than 20000 gas meters installed in THOTH2 project partners’ grids and by summarizing the performance of traditional technologies with H2NG mixtures and pure H2 based on literature review operators experience and manufacturers knowledge. Based on these insights recommendations are given to stakeholders on overcoming the identified barriers to facilitate a smooth transition.
Near-term Infrastructure Rollout and Investment Strategies for Net-zero Hydrogen Supply Chains
Feb 2024
Publication
Low-carbon hydrogen plays a key role in European industrial decarbonization strategies. This work investigates the cost-optimal planning of European low-carbon hydrogen supply chains in the near term (2025–2035) comparing several hydrogen production technologies and considering multiple spatial scales. We focus on mature hydrogen production technologies: steam methane reforming of natural gas biomethane reforming biomass gasification and water electrolysis. The analysis includes carbon capture and storage for natural gas and biomass-derived hydrogen. We formulate and solve a linear optimization model that determines the costoptimal type size and location of hydrogen production and transport technologies in compliance with selected carbon emission targets including the EU fit for 55 target and an ambitious net-zero emissions target for 2035. Existing steam methane reforming capacities are considered and optimal carbon and biomass networks are designed. Findings identify biomass-based hydrogen production as the most cost-efficient hydrogen technology. Carbon capture and storage is installed to achieve net-zero carbon emissions while electrolysis remains costdisadvantageous and is deployed on a limited scale across all considered sensitivity scenarios. Our analysis highlights the importance of spatial resolution revealing that national perspectives underestimate costs by neglecting domestic transport needs and regional resource constraints emphasizing the necessity for highly decarbonized infrastructure designs aligned with renewable resource availabilities.
An Analytical Model for the Electrolyser Performance Derived from Materials Parameters
Oct 2017
Publication
Hydrogen is seen as a key element for the transition from a fossil fuel based economy to a renewable sustainable economy. Hydrogen can be used either directly as an energy carrier or as a feedstock for the reduction of CO2 to synthetic hydrocarbons. Hydrogen can be produced by electrolysis decomposing water in oxygen and hydrogen. This paper presents an overview of the three major electrolysis technologies: acidic (PEM) alkaline (AEL) and solid oxide electrolysis (SOEC). An updated list of existing electrolysers and commercial providers is provided. Most interestingly the specific prices of commercial devices are also given when available. Despite tremendous development of the PEM technology in the past decades the largest and most efficient electrolysers are still alkaline. Thus this technology is expected to play a key role in the transition to the hydrogen society. A detailed description of the components in an alkaline electrolyser and an analytical model of the process are provided. The analytical model allows investigating the influence of the different operating parameters on the efficiency. Specifically the effect of temperature on the electrolyte conductivity—and thus on the efficiency—is analyzed. It is found that in the typical range of operating temperatures for alkaline electrolysers of 65˚C - 220˚C the efficiency varies by up to 3.5 percentage points increasing from 80% to 83.5% at 65˚C and 220˚C respectively.
Climate Neutrality of the French Energy System: Overview and Impacts of Sustainable Aviation Fuel Production
Aug 2024
Publication
CO2 emission reduction of sectors such as aviation maritime shipping road haulage and chemical production is challenging but necessary. Although these sectors will most likely continue to rely on carbonaceous energy carriers they are expected to gradually shift away from fossil fuels. In order to do so the prominent option is to utilize alternative carbon sources—like biomass and CO2 originating from carbon capture—for the production of non-fossil carbonaceous vectors (biofuels and e-fuels). However the limited availability of biomass and the varying nature of other carbon sources necessitate a comprehensive evaluation of trade-offs between potential carbon uses and existing sources. Then it is primordial to understand the origin of carbon used in sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) to understand the implications of defossilizing aviation for the energy system. Moreover the production of SAF implies deep changes to the energy system that are quantified in this work. This study utilizes the linear programming cost optimization tool EnergyScope TD to analyze the holistic French energy system encompassing transport industry electricity and heat sectors while ensuring net greenhouse gas neutrality. A novel method to model and quantify carbon flows within the system is introduced enabling a comprehensive assessment of greenhouse gas neutrality. This study highlights the significance of fulfilling clean energy requirements and implementing carbon dioxide removal measures as crucial steps toward achieving climate neutrality. Indeed to reach climate neutrality a production of 1046 TWh of electricity by non-fossil sources is needed. Furthermore the findings underscore the critical role of efficient carbon and energy valorization from biomass providing evidence that producing fuels by combining biomass and hydrogen is optimal. The study also offers valuable insights into the future cost and impact of SAF production for air travel originating from France. That is the European law ReFuelEU would increase the price of plane tickets by +33% and would require 126 TWh of hydrogen and 50 TWh of biomass to produce the necessary 91 TWh of jet fuel. Finally the implications of the assumption behind the production of SAF are discussed.
A Cogeneration System Based on Solid Oxide and Proton Exchange Membrane Fuel Cells with Hybrid Storage for Off-grid Applications
Jan 2019
Publication
Solid oxide fuel cells (SOFC) have developed to a mature technology able to achieve electrical efficiencies beyond 60%. This makes them particularly suitable for off-grid applications where SOFCs can supply both electricity and heat at high efficiency. Concerns related to lifetime particularly when operated dynamically and the high investment cost are however still the main obstacles toward a widespread adoption of this technology. In this paper we propose a hybrid cogeneration system that attempts to overcome these limitations in which the SOFC mainly provides the baseload of the system. Introducing a purification unit allows the production and storage of pure hydrogen from the SOFC anode off-gas. The hydrogen can be stored and used in a proton exchange membrane fuel cell (PEMFC) during peak demands. The SOFC system is completed with a battery used during periods of high electricity production. We propose the use of a mixed integer-linear optimization framework for the sizing of the different components of the system and particularly for identifying the optimal trade-off between round-trip efficiency and investment cost of the battery-based and hydrogen-based storage systems. The proposed system is applied and optimized to two case studies: an off-grid dwelling and a cruise ship. The results show that if the SOFC is used as the main energy conversion technology of the system the use of hydrogen storage in combination with a PEMFC and a battery is more economically convenient compared to the use of the SOFC in stand-alone mode or of pure battery storage. The results show that the proposed hybrid storage solution makes it possible to reduce the investment cost of the system while maintaining the use of the SOFC as the main energy source of the system.
Optimization and Dynamic Responses of an Integrated Fuel Cell and Battery System for an 800 kW Ferry: A Case Study
Aug 2022
Publication
The recent targets by different countries to stop the sales or registrations of internal combustion engines (ICE) have led to the further development of battery and fuel cell technologies to provide power for different applications. The main aim of this study is to evaluate the possibility of using an integrated Lithium-Ion battery and proton exchange membrane fuel cell (PEMFC) as the prime mover for a case study of a 800 kW ferry with a total length of 50.8 m to transport 780 passengers for a distance of 24 km in 70 min. Accounting for five types of Lithium-Ion batteries and different numbers of PEMFCs twenty-five scenarios are suggested based on a quasi-static model. To perform the optimization the Performance Criterion of the Fuel cell–Battery integrated systems (PCFB) is introduced to include the effects of the sizes weights costs hydrogen consumption efficiency and power in addition to the number of fuel cells and the battery capacity. Results indicate that the maximum PCFB value of 10.755 (1/kg2m3 $) can be obtained once the overall size weight efficiency hydrogen consumption and cost of the system are 18 m3 11160 kg 49.25% 33.6 kg and 119.58 k$ respectively using the Lithium Titanite Oxide (LTO) Lithium-Ion battery with nine PEMFCs.
Design and Optimization of a Solar Parabolic Dish for Steam Generation in a Blue Hydrogen Production Plant
Oct 2025
Publication
The integration of renewable energy into industrial processes is crucial for reducing the carbon footprint of conventional hydrogen production. This work presents detailed design optical–thermal simulation and performance analysis of a solar parabolic dish (SPD) system for supplying high-temperature steam to a Steam Methane Reforming (SMR) plant. A 5 m diameter dish with a focal length of 3 m was designed and optimized using COMSOL Multiphysics (version 6.2) and MATLAB (version R2023a). Optical ray tracing confirmed a geometric concentration ratio of 896× effectively focusing solar irradiation onto a helical cavity receiver. Thermal–fluid simulations demonstrated the system’s capability to superheat steam to 551 ◦C at a mass flow rate of 0.0051 kg/s effectively meeting the stringent thermal requirements for SMR. The optimized SPD system with a 5 m dish diameter and 3 m focal length was designed to supply 10% of the total process heat (≈180 GJ/day). This contribution reduces natural gas consumption and leads to annual fuel savings of approximately 141000 SAR (Saudi Riyal) along with a substantial reduction in CO2 emissions. These quantitative results confirm the SPD as both a technically reliable and economically attractive solution for sustainable blue hydrogen production.
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