Institution of Gas Engineers & Managers
A Bibliometric Study on the Research Trends and Hotspots of Proton Exchange Membrane Electrolyzer
Jan 2024
Publication
The application of hydrogen energy produced by proton exchange membrane electrolyzer (PEMEC) is conducive to the solution of the greenhouse effect and the energy crisis. In order to understand the development trends and research hotspot of PEMEC in recent years a total of 1874 research articles related to this field from 2003 to 2023 were obtained from the Web of Science Core Collection (WoS CC) database. The visualization software VOSviewer is used for bibliometric analysis and the research progress hotspots and trends in the PEMEC field are summarized. It was found that in the past two decades literature in the PEMEC field has shown a trend of stable increase at first and then rapidly increasing. And it is in a stage of rapid growth after 2021.Renewable Energy previously published research articles related to PEMEC with the highest frequency of citations. There are a total of 6128 researchers in this field but core authors only account for 4.5% of the total. Although China entered this field later than the United States and Canada it has the largest number of research articles. The research results provide a comprehensive overview of various aspects in the PEMEC field which is beneficial for researchers to grasp the development hotspots of PEMEC.
Large-Scale Hydrogen Production Systems Using Marine Renewable Energies: State-of-the-Art
Dec 2023
Publication
To achieve a more ecologically friendly energy transition by the year 2050 under the European “green” accord hydrogen has recently gained significant scientific interest due to its efficiency as an energy carrier. This paper focuses on large-scale hydrogen production systems based on marine renewable-energy-based wind turbines and tidal turbines. The paper reviews the different technologies of hydrogen production using water electrolyzers energy storage unit base hydrogen vectors and fuel cells (FC). The focus is on large-scale hydrogen production systems using marine renewable energies. This study compares electrolyzers energy storage units and FC technologies with the main factors considered being cost sustainability and efficiency. Furthermore a review of aging models of electrolyzers and FCs based on electrical circuit models is drawn from the literature and presented including characterization methods of the model components and the parameters extraction methods using a dynamic current profile. In addition industrial projects for producing hydrogen from renewable energies that have already been completed or are now in progress are examined. The paper is concluded through a summary of recent hydrogen production and energy storage advances as well as some applications. Perspectives on enhancing the sustainability and efficiency of hydrogen production systems are also proposed and discussed. This paper provides a review of behavioral aging models of electrolyzers and FCs when integrated into hydrogen production systems as this is crucial for their successful deployment in an ever-changing energy context. We also review the EU’s potential for renewable energy analysis. In summary this study provides valuable information for research and industry stakeholders aiming to promote a sustainable and environmentally friendly energy transition.
Life-cycle Assessment of Hydrogen Produced through Chemical Looping Dry Reforming of Biogas
Jun 2024
Publication
Chemical looping dry reforming of methane (CLDRM) using perovskites as a catalyst is considered a promising option for producing hydrogen from biogas. In this work the life-cycle performance of a system compiling a CLDRM unit paired with a water gas shift unit a pressure swing adsorption unit and a combined cycle scheme to provide steam and electricity was assessed. The main data needed to reflect the behavior of the reforming reaction was obtained experimentally and implemented in an Aspen Plus® simulation. Inventory data was obtained through process simulation and used to assess the environmental performance of the process in terms of carbon footprint acidification freshwater eutrophication ozone depletion photochemical ozone formation and depletion of minerals and metals. Overall the environmental viability of the production of green hydrogen from biogas was found to be heavily dependent on the biogas leakage in anaerobic digestion plants. The CLDRM system was benchmarked against a conventional DRM implementation for the same feedstock. While the conventional DRM plant environmentally outperformed the perovskite-based CLDRM the latter might present advantages from an implementation point of view.
Research Progress on Corrosion and Hydrogen Embrittlement in Hydrogen-Natural Gas Pipeline Transportation
Jun 2023
Publication
Hydrogen clean efficient and zero-carbon is seen as a most promising energy source. The use of existing gas pipelines for hydrogenenatural gas transportation is considered to be an effective way to achieve long-distance large-scale efficient and economical hydrogen transportation. However the pipelines for hydrogenenatural gas transportation contain lots of impurities (e.g. CH4 high-pressure H2 H2S and CO2) and free water which will inevitably lead to corrosion and hydrogen embrittlement. This paper presents a systematic review of research and an outlook for corrosion and hydrogen embrittlement in hydrogenenatural gas pipeline transportation. The results show that gasphase hydrogen charging is suitable for hydrogenenatural gas transportation but this technique lacks technical standards. By contrast the liquid-phase hydrogen charging technique is more mature but has large deviation from the engineering reality. In the hydrogenenatural gas transportation pipelines corrosion and hydrogen embrittlement are synergetic and competitive but the failure mechanism and change law when corrosion and hydrogen embrittlement coexist remain unclear which need to be further clarified by experiments. The failure mechanism is believed to be mainly sensitive to three key factors i.e. the H2S/CO2 partial pressure ratio the hydrogen blending ratio and material strength. The increase of the three factors will make the pipeline materials more corrosive and more sensitive to hydrogen embrittlement. The research findings can be used as a reference for research and development of long-distance hydrogenenatural gas transportation technology and will drive the high-quality development of the hydrogenenatural gas blending industry.
Thermodynamic Evaluation of Solar Energy-based Methanol and Hydrogen Production and Power Generation Pathways: A Comparative Study
Sep 2024
Publication
This work presents a comparative novel evaluation of two distinct fuels methanol and hydrogen production and power generation routes via fuel cells. The first route includes the methanol production from direct partial oxidation of methane to methanol where the methanol is condensed stored and sent to a direct methanol fuel cell. The second route is hydrogen production from solar methane cracking (named as turquoise hydrogen) where heat is supplied from concentrated solar power and hydrogen is stored and directed to a hydrogen fuel cell. This study aims to provide insights into these fuel's production conditions storage methods energy and exergy efficiencies. The proposed system is simulated using the Engineering Equation Solver software and a thermodynamic analysis of the entire system including all the equipment and process streams is performed. The methanol and hydrogen route's overall energy and exergy efficiencies are 39.75% 38.35% 35.84% and 34.58% respectively. The highest exergy destruction rate of 1605 kW is observed for the partial oxidation of methane to methanol. The methanol and hydrogen routes generate 32.087 MWh and 11.582 MWh of electricity for 16-hour of fuel cell operation respectively. Sensitivity analysis has been performed to observe the effects of different parameters such as operating temperature and mass flow rate of fuels on the electricity production and energy efficiencies of the systems.
Design, Development, and Performance of a 10 kW Polymer Exchange Membrane Fuel Cell Stack as Part of a Hybrid Power Source Designed to Supply a Motor Glider
Aug 2020
Publication
A 10 kW PEMFC (polymer exchange membrane fuel cell) stack consisting of two 5 kW modules (A) and (B) connected in series with a multi-function controller unit was constructed and tested. The electrical performance of the V-shaped PEMFC stack was investigated under constant and variable electrical load. It was found that the PEMFC stack was capable of supplying the required 10 kW of electrical power. An optimised purification process via ‘purge’ or humidification implemented by means of a short-circuit unit (SCU) control strategy enabled slightly improved performance. Online monitoring of the utilisation of the hydrogen system was developed and tested during the operation of the stack especially under variable electrical load. The air-cooling subsystem consisting of a common channel connecting two 5 kW PEMFC modules and two cascade axial fans was designed manufactured using 3D printing technology and tested with respect to the electrical performance of the device. The dependence of total partial-pressure drop vs. ratio of air volumetric flow for the integrated PEMFC stack with cooling devices was also determined. An algorithm of stack operation involving thermal humidity and energy management was elaborated. The safety operation and fault diagnosis of the PEMFC stack was also tested.
Regime-driven Niches and Institutional Entrepreneurs: Adding Hydrogen to Regional Energy Systems in Germany
Nov 2023
Publication
In recent years production and supply of hydrogen has gained significant attention within the German energy transition. This is due to increasingly urgent pressures to mitigate climate change and geopolitical imperatives to substitute natural gas. Hydrogen is seen as an important cross-sectoral energy carrier serving multiple functions including heat production for industry and households fuel for transportation and energy storage for stabilization of electricity supply. In the context of various funding mechanisms on several administrative levels regional value chains for green hydrogen supply are emerging. To date however few studies analyzing regional hydrogen systems exist. Due to its high projected demand of energy sources for heating industrial processes and mobility Germany appears to be a very relevant research area in this emerging field. Situated within the concept of the multi-level perspective this article examines the way how regional “niches” of green hydrogen evolve and how they are organized. The study takes an evolutionary perspective in analyzing processes of embedding green hydrogen infrastructures in regional energy regimes which entered “re-configuration”-pathways. It argues that the congruence of available resources for renewable electricity established networks of institutional entrepreneurs and access to higher level funding are conditions which put incumbent regime-actors in favorable positions to implement green hydrogen niches. Conversely the embedding of green hydrogen infrastructures in regional energy systems is a case in point of how the attributes of niches in particular technological domains can be used to explain the transition pathway entered by a surrounding energy regime.
Process Path for Reducing Carbon Emissions from Steel Industry—Combined Electrification and Hydrogen Reduction
Jan 2024
Publication
This review focuses on the energy structure of iron and steel production and a feasible development path for carbon reduction. The process path and feasible development direction of carbon emission reduction in the iron and steel industry have been analyzed from the perspective of the carbon–electricity–hydrogen ternary relationship. Frontier technologies such as “hydrogen replacing carbon” are being developed worldwide. Combining the high efficiency of microwave electric-thermal conversion with the high efficiency and pollution-free advantages of hydrogen-reducing agents may drive future developments. In this review a process path for “microwave + hydrogen” synergistic metallurgy is proposed. The reduction of magnetite powder by H2 (CO) in a microwave field versus in a conventional field is compared. The driving effect of the microwave field is found to be significant and the synergistic reduction effect of microwaves with H2 is far greater than that of CO.
Comparative Study of Global, European and Italian Standards on Hydrogen Refuelling Stations
Jan 2022
Publication
The purpose of this paper is to give a strategic overview of the existing standards governing the construction and operation of hydrogen refueling stations. A succinct and comprehensive study of hydrogen refueling station standards globally in Europe and in Italy is conducted and discussed in light of the new European Hydrogen Strategy and Roadmap. Among the numerous topics examined a particular emphasis is placed on the standards in force for on-site hydrogen production via water electrolysis hydrogen storage both liquid and gaseous and refueling protocols for lightduty and heavy-duty vehicles on an international level through the provision of ISO IEC and SAE standards; on a European level through the examination of the CEN/CENELEC database; and on an Italian national level through the analysis of the UNI database.
Recent Advances in Electrocatalysts for Seawater Splitting
Dec 2020
Publication
Water splitting is an effective strategy to produce renewable and sustainable hydrogen energy. Especially seawater splitting avoiding use of the limited freshwater resource is more intriguing. Nowadays electrocatalysts explored for hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) and oxygen evolution reaction (OER) using natural seawater or saline electrolyte have been increasingly reported. To better understand the current status and challenges of the electrocatalysts for HER and OER from seawater we comprehensively review the recent advances in electrocatalysts for seawater splitting. The fundamentals challenges and possible strategies for seawater splitting are firstly presented. Then the recently reported electrocatalysts that explored for HER and OER from seawater are summarized and discussed. Finally the perspectives in the development of high-efficient electrocatalysts for seawater splitting are also proposed.
Hydrogen UK Supply Chain Strategic Assessment
Sep 2024
Publication
Hydrogen offers the UK a unique opportunity to deliver on our Net Zero ambitions enabling deep decarbonisation of the parts of the energy system that are challenging to electrify balancing the energy system by providing large scale long duration energy storage and reducing pressure on electricity infrastructure. The UK Government in recognition of the centrality of hydrogen to the future energy system has set a 10GW hydrogen production ambition to be achieved by 2030. This ambition and its supporting policies such as the Hydrogen Business Model the Low Carbon Hydrogen Standard and the Hydrogen Transport and Storage Business Models will unlock private sector investment and kick-start the UK’s hydrogen activity. Encouragingly the UK has a positive track record of deploying low carbon technologies. The combination of the UK’s world leading policies and incentive schemes alongside a vibrant Research Development and Innovation (RD&I) and engineering environment has enabled rapid deployment of technologies such as offshore wind and electric vehicles. Yet despite being world leaders in deployment early opportunities for regional supply chain growth and job creation were not fully realised and taken advantage of from inception. The hydrogen sector is therefore at a tipping point. To capitalise on the economic opportunity hydrogen offers the UK must learn from prior technology deployments and build a strong domestic hydrogen supply chain in parallel to championing deployment.
Hydrogen is unique amongst low carbon technologies. It represents a significant economic opportunity with future hydrogen markets estimated by the Hydrogen Innovation Initiative to be worth $8tn and hydrogen technology markets estimated to reach $1tn by 20501 but crucially it is also still a nascent market. Unlike many other low carbon technologies where supply chains are already well established hydrogen supply chains are embryonic meaning that the UK has an opportunity to anchor these supply chains here and establish itself as a global leader.
The UK is well placed to capitalise on this opportunity with favourable geography and geology that enables us to produce and store hydrogen cost effectively coupled with a strong pipeline of hydrogen projects a stable policy environment that is attractive to investors and a wealth of transferable skills and expertise from the oil and gas industry.
We must ensure that alongside our focus on deployment we are also investing in technology and supply chains. Not only will this deliver exponential economic benefits from the projects supported by Government but it will also enable us to tackle increasing global supply chain constraints. Hydrogen UK estimated in its Economic Impact Assessment that hydrogen could deliver 30000 jobs annually and £7bn of GVA by 2030
It is important to be targeted and strategic in our investment and activities and recognise that hydrogen represents a wide range of technologies and the UK should not expect to lead in every area. Hydrogen UK with the support of the Hydrogen Delivery Council has undertaken analysis of the hydrogen value chain building on UK strengths and identifying the high value items that can deliver significant impact and benefit to the UK. We have also conducted widespread engagement with project developers to identify the barriers to utilising UK technology in projects and with technology developers to identify the challenges and barriers to investing and siting development and manufacturing in the UK.
The report can be found on Hydrogen UK's website.
Hydrogen is unique amongst low carbon technologies. It represents a significant economic opportunity with future hydrogen markets estimated by the Hydrogen Innovation Initiative to be worth $8tn and hydrogen technology markets estimated to reach $1tn by 20501 but crucially it is also still a nascent market. Unlike many other low carbon technologies where supply chains are already well established hydrogen supply chains are embryonic meaning that the UK has an opportunity to anchor these supply chains here and establish itself as a global leader.
The UK is well placed to capitalise on this opportunity with favourable geography and geology that enables us to produce and store hydrogen cost effectively coupled with a strong pipeline of hydrogen projects a stable policy environment that is attractive to investors and a wealth of transferable skills and expertise from the oil and gas industry.
We must ensure that alongside our focus on deployment we are also investing in technology and supply chains. Not only will this deliver exponential economic benefits from the projects supported by Government but it will also enable us to tackle increasing global supply chain constraints. Hydrogen UK estimated in its Economic Impact Assessment that hydrogen could deliver 30000 jobs annually and £7bn of GVA by 2030
It is important to be targeted and strategic in our investment and activities and recognise that hydrogen represents a wide range of technologies and the UK should not expect to lead in every area. Hydrogen UK with the support of the Hydrogen Delivery Council has undertaken analysis of the hydrogen value chain building on UK strengths and identifying the high value items that can deliver significant impact and benefit to the UK. We have also conducted widespread engagement with project developers to identify the barriers to utilising UK technology in projects and with technology developers to identify the challenges and barriers to investing and siting development and manufacturing in the UK.
The report can be found on Hydrogen UK's website.
Modelling and Simulation of an Integrated Coupled Reactor for Hydrogen Production and Carbon Dioxide Utilisation in an Integrated Fuel Cell Power System
Dec 2024
Publication
In today’s world the need for sustainable energy solutions is paramount to address the ongoing crisis of increasing greenhouse gas emissions and global warming. Industries heavily reliant on fossil fuels must explore alternative energy sources. Hydrogen with its high heating value and zero direct emissions has emerged as a promising fuel for the future. Electrolytic hydrogen production has gained significance as it enables demand-side response grid stabilization using excess energy and the mitigation of curtailment from intermittent renewable energy sources (RES) such as solar and wind. Advanced combined heat and power (CHP) systems comprise of Solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC) module and a coupled reforming reactor to capture energy contained in the SOFC exhaust gases from SOFC. In present work 3D CFD model of an experimental coupled reactor used for onsite hydrogen production is developed and implemented into ANSYS Fluent® software. The study is aimed at opti mizing the reactor performance by identifying appropriate kinetic models for reforming and combustion re actions. SOFC anode off-gas (AOG) comprising mainly of unconverted hydrogen is combined with methane combustion to enhance thermal efficiency of the reactor and hence the CHP system. Kinetic models for catalytic reforming and combustion are implemented into ANSYS Fluent® through custom-built user defined functions (UDFs) written in C programming language. Simulation results are validated with experimental data and found in good agreement. AOG assisted combustion of methane shows a substantial improvement in thermal efficiency of the system. Improvement in thermal efficiency and reduction in carbon-based fuel demand AOG utilization contributes to sustainable hydrogen production and curtailment of greenhouse gas emissions.
Technoeconomic, Environmental and Multi-criteria Decision Making Investigations for Optimisation of Off-grid Hybrid Renewable Energy System with Green Hydrogen Production
Jan 2024
Publication
The current study presents a comprehensive investigation of different energy system configurations for a remote village community in India with entirely renewable electricity. Excess electricity generated by the systems has been stored using two types of energy storage options: lithium-ion batteries and green hydrogen production through the electrolysers. The hybrid renewable energy system (HRES) configurations have been sized by minimising the levelised cost of energy (LCOE). In order to identify the best-performing HRES configuration economic and environmental performance indicators has been analysed using the multi-criteria decision-making method (MCDM) TOPSIS. Among the evaluated system configurations system-1 with a photovoltaic panel (PV) size of 310.24 kW a wind turbine (WT) size of 690 kW a biogas generator (BG) size of 100 kW a battery (BAT) size of 174 kWh an electrolyser (ELEC) size of 150 kW a hydrogen tank (HT) size of 120 kg and a converter (CONV) size of 106.24 kW has been found to be the best-performing system since it provides the highest relative closeness (RC) value (∼0.817) and also has the lowest fuel consumption rate of 2.31 kg/kWh. However system-6 shows the highest amount of CO2 (143.97 kg/year) among all the studied system configurations. Furthermore a detailed technical economic and environmental analysis has been conducted on the optimal HRES configuration. The minimum net present cost (NPC) LCOE and cost of hydrogen (COH) for system 1 has been estimated to be $1960584 $0.44/kWh and $22.3/kg respectively.
The Cost of Clean Hydrogen from Offshore Wind and Electrolysis
Feb 2024
Publication
The decarbonization of industry heating and transportation is a major challenge for many countries’ energy transition. Hydrogen is a direct low-carbon fuel alternative to natural gas offering a higher flexibility in the range of possible applications yet currently most hydrogen is produced using carbonintensive steam methane reforming due to cost considerations. Therefore this study explores the economics of a prominent low-carbon method of hydrogen production comparing the cost of hydrogen generation from offshore wind farms with and without grid electricity imports to conventional hydrogen production methods. A novel techno-economic model for offshore electrolysis production costs is presented which makes hydrogen production fully dispatchable leveraging geological salt-cavern storage. This model determines the lifetime costs aportioned across the system components as well as the Levelized Cost of Hydrogen (LCOH). Using the United Kingdom as a case study LCOH from offshore wind power is calculated to be €8.68 /kgH2 using alkaline electrolysis (AEL) €10.49 /kgH2 using proton exchange membrane electrolysis (PEMEL) and €10.88 /kgH2 with grid electricity to backup the offshore wind power. A stochastic Monte-Carlo model is used to asses the uncertainty on costs and identify the cost of capital electrolyser and wind farm capital costs and cost of electricity as the most important drivers of LCOH across the different scenarios. Reducing the capital cost to comparative levels observed on today’s wind farms alone could see AEL LCOH fall to €5.32 /kgH2 near competitive with conventional generation methods.
Hydrogen Europe Podcast Episode 6 - Exploring Opportunities for EU-Canada Hydrogen Cooperation
Dec 2023
Publication
In the sixth episode titled Exploring Opportunities for EU-Canada Hydrogen Cooperation our CEO Jorgo Chatzimarkakis discusses with John Risley Charmain and CEO of CFFI Ventures and Stefan Kaufmann former Innovation Commissioner for Green Hydrogen of the German government and now adviser to Thyssenkrupp. In the discussion about hydrogen market and technology's development in Canada and in Germany the businessman and the policy advisor bring two different geographical and expertise perspectives about the topic. Taking into consideration the US' IRA Canada's investments in the hydrogen sector and the European plans regarding H2Global and the Hydrogen Bank our guests compare North America and the EU. They debate over the economic and financial support the industry needs to invest in the green energy transition and the role global cooperation and competition play.
Identification of Hydrogen-Energy-Related Emerging Technologies Based on Text Mining
Dec 2023
Publication
As a versatile energy carrier hydrogen possesses tremendous potential to reduce greenhouse emissions and promote energy transition. Global interest in producing hydrogen from renewable energy sources and transporting storing and utilizing hydrogen is rising rapidly. However the high costs of producing clean hydrogen and the uncertain application scenarios for hydrogen energy result in its relatively limited utilization worldwide. It is necessary to find new promising technological paths to drive the development of hydrogen energy. As part of technological innovation emerging technologies have vital features such as prominent impact novelty relatively fast growth etc. Identifying emerging hydrogen-energy-related technologies is important for discovering innovation opportunities during the energy transition. Existing research lacks analysis of the characteristics of emerging technologies. Thus this paper proposes a method combining the latent Dirichlet allocation topic model and hydrogen-energy expert group decision-making. This is used to identify emerging hydrogen-related technology regarding two features of emerging technologies novelty and prominent impact. After data processing topic modeling and analysis the patent dataset was divided into twenty topics. Six emerging topics possess novelty and prominent impact among twenty topics. The results show that the current hotspots aim to promote the application of hydrogen energy by improving the performance of production catalysts overcoming the wide power fluctuations and large-scale instability of renewable energy power generation and developing advanced hydrogen safety technologies. This method efficiently identifies emerging technologies from patents and studies their development trends. It fills a gap in the research on emerging technologies in hydrogen-related energy. Research achievements could support the selection of technology pathways during the low-carbon energy transition.
Challenges and Opportunities for Hydrogen Production from Microalgae
Nov 2015
Publication
The global population is predicted to increase from ~7.3 billion to over 9 billion people by 2050.Together with rising economic growth this is forecast to result in a 50% increase in fueldemand which will have to be met while reducing carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) emissions by 50–80%to maintain social political energy and climate security. This tension between rising fuel demandand the requirement for rapid global decarbonization highlights the need to fast-track thecoordinated development and deployment of efficient cost-effective renewable technologies forthe production of CO 2 neutral energy. Currently only 20% of global energy is provided aselectricity while 80% is provided as fuel. Hydrogen (H 2) is the most advanced CO 2 -free fuel andprovides a ‘common’ energy currency as it can be produced via a range of renewabletechnologies including photovoltaic (PV) wind wave and biological systems such as microalgaeto power the next generation of H 2 fuel cells. Microalgae production systems for carbon-basedfuel (oil and ethanol) are now at the demonstration scale. This review focuses on evaluating thepotential of microalgal technologies for the commercial production of solar-driven H2 fromwater. It summarizes key global technology drivers the potential and theoretical limits ofmicroalgal H2 production systems emerging strategies to engineer next-generation systems andhow these fit into an evolving H 2 economy.
Hydrogen as an Alternative Fuel: A Comprehensive Review of Challenges and Opportunities in Production, Storage, and Transportation
Jan 2025
Publication
The rapid growth of the global population and industrial activities has significantly increased greenhouse gases (GHGs) emissions with projections indicating a temperature rise of 3–6 ◦C by 2050. Urgent action is needed to limit global warming to 1.5 ◦C above pre-industrial levels. Hydrogen with its high energy density and compatibility with renewable energy systems presents a promising clean energy solution to mitigate GHGs emissions. Yet its widespread adoption faces challenges such as high production costs limited infrastructure and an underdeveloped value chain. At present approximately 96% of global hydrogen production relies on fossil fuels contributing to substantial emissions while only 4% comes from water electrolysis. Green hydrogen produced via electrolysis with 55–80% efficiency remains expensive at $2.28–7.39/kg compared to grey hydrogen at $0.67–1.31/kg which generates 8.5 kg CO₂ per kg of hydrogen production. Hydrogen’s low density poses challenges for storage while transportation risks and insufficient infrastructure create further obstacles. The lack of global standards and investment uncertainties further impede the development of a comprehensive hydrogen economy. This review evaluates hydrogen’s potential as a sustainable energy carrier providing in sights into advancements and ongoing challenges in production storage and transportation. Key findings highlight the necessity of coordinated efforts to enhance storage technologies lower production costs and establish supportive policies highlighting hydrogen’s critical role in achieving a sustainable energy transition.
Active Energy Management Based on Meta-Heuristic Algorithms of Fuel Cell/Battery/Supercapacitor Energy Storage System for Aircraft
Mar 2021
Publication
This paper presents the application of an active energy management strategy to a hybrid system consisting of a proton exchange membrane fuel cell (PEMFC) battery and supercapacitor. The purpose of energy management is to control the battery and supercapacitor states of charge (SOCs) as well as minimizing hydrogen consumption. Energy management should be applied to hybrid systems created in this way to increase efficiency and control working conditions. In this study optimization of an existing model in the literature with different meta-heuristic methods was further examined and results similar to those in the literature were obtained. Ant lion optimizer (ALO) moth-flame optimization (MFO) dragonfly algorithm (DA) sine cosine algorithm (SCA) multi-verse optimizer (MVO) particle swarm optimization (PSO) and whale optimization algorithm (WOA) meta-heuristic algorithms were applied to control the flow of power between sources. The optimization methods were compared in terms of hydrogen consumption and calculation time. Simulation studies were conducted in Matlab/Simulink R2020b (academic license). The contribution of the study is that the optimization methods of ant lion algorithm moth-flame algorithm and sine cosine algorithm were applied to this system for the first time. It was concluded that the most effective method in terms of hydrogen consumption and computational burden was the sine cosine algorithm. In addition the sine cosine algorithm provided better results than similar meta-heuristic algorithms in the literature in terms of hydrogen consumption. At the same time meta-heuristic optimization algorithms and equivalent consumption minimization strategy (ECMS) and classical proportional integral (PI) control strategy were compared as a benchmark study as done in the literature and it was concluded that meta-heuristic algorithms were more effective in terms of hydrogen consumption and computational time.
Optimal Scheduling of an Electric-Hydrogen-Integrated Energy System Considering Virtual Energy Storage
Jan 2024
Publication
In this paper a two-layer optimization approach is proposed to facilitate the multi-energy complementarity and coupling and optimize the system configuration in an electric-hydrogen-integrated energy system (EH-IES). Firstly an EH-IES with virtual energy storage is proposed to reduce the cost of physical energy storage equipment. Secondly a two-layer optimal allocation method is proposed under a multi-timescale strategy to examine the comprehensive evaluation index of environmental protection and economy. The upper layer utilizes the NSGA-II multi-objective optimization method for system capacity allocation while the lower layer performs economic dispatch at the lowest cost. Ultimately the output includes the results of the equipment capacity allocation of the EH-IES that satisfies the reliability constraint interval and the daily scheduling results of the equipment. The results demonstrate that the electric-hydrogen-integrated energy system with the coupling of multiple energy equipment not only enhances the utilization of renewable energy sources but also reduces the usage of fossil energy and improves the system’s reliability.
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