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Analysis of Implementing Hydrogen Storage for Surplus Energy from PV Systems in Polish Households

Abstract

One of the methods for mitigating the duck curve phenomenon in photovoltaic (PV) energy systems is storing surplus energy in the form of hydrogen. However, there is a lack of studies focused on residential PV systems that assess the impact of hydrogen storage on the reduction of energy flow imbalance to and from the national grid. This study presents an analysis of hydrogen energy storage based on real-world data from a household PV installation. Using simulation methods grounded in actual electricity consumption and hourly PV production data, the research identified the storage requirements, including the required operating hours and the capacity of the hydrogen tank. The analysis was based on a 1 kW electrolyzer and a fuel cell, representing the smallest and most basic commercially available units, and included a sensitivity analysis. At the household level—represented by a singlefamily home with an annual energy consumption and PV production of approximately 4–5 MWh over a two-year period—hydrogen storage enabled the production of 49.8 kg and 44.6 kg of hydrogen in the first and second years, respectively. This corresponded to the use of 3303 kWh of PV-generated electricity and an increase in self-consumption from 30% to 64%. Hydrogen storage helped to smooth out peak energy flows from the PV system, decreasing the imbalance from 5.73 kWh to 4.42 kWh. However, while it greatly improves self-consumption, its capacity to mitigate power flow imbalance further is constrained; substantial improvements would necessitate a much larger electrolyzer proportional in size to the PV system’s output.

Funding source: This research was partially supported by the Ministry of Science and Higher Education, Poland, grant AGH number 16.16.210.476.
Countries: Poland
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/content/journal7389
2025-07-11
2025-12-05
/content/journal7389
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