scholarly journals Energy Conversion Analysis of a Novel Solar Thermochemical System Coupled With Fuel Cells

2015 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ian Vinck ◽  
Nesrin Ozalp

Fossil fuels have been the main supply of power generation for use in manufacturing, transportation, residential and commercial sectors. However, environmentally adverse effects of fossil fuel conversion systems combined with pending shortage raise major concerns. As a promising approach to tackle these challenges, this paper presents a novel energy conversion system comprising of a solar thermal reactor coupled with hydrogen fuel cell and carbon fuel cell for electricity generation. The system uses concentrated solar energy for high temperature heat which upgrades the calorific value of the feedstock by 8%. The paper describes the components and characteristics of the proposed concept and models the energy flow of this system. A comparison based on unit mass feedstock supply is made with conventional Brayton cycles for electricity production. The results show that the extent of acetylene byproduct conversion in the solar reactor is of crucial importance to ensure competitiveness. Depending on the fuel cells efficiency and even more on the extent of byproduct formation, the results show that the overall chemical-to-electrical efficiency of this combined system ranges from 35 to 58%.

2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (46) ◽  
pp. 24284-24306
Author(s):  
Xuefeng Ren ◽  
Yiran Wang ◽  
Anmin Liu ◽  
Zhihong Zhang ◽  
Qianyuan Lv ◽  
...  

Fuel cell is an electrochemical device, which can directly convert the chemical energy of fuel into electric energy, without heat process, not limited by Carnot cycle, high energy conversion efficiency, no noise and pollution.


2018 ◽  
Vol MA2018-01 (32) ◽  
pp. 1992-1992
Author(s):  
Mohamed El Hannach ◽  
Ka Hung Wong ◽  
Yadvinder Singh ◽  
Narinder Singh Khattra ◽  
Erik Kjeang

The hydrogen fuel cell is a promising technology that supports the development of sustainable energy systems and zero emission vehicles. One of the key technical challenges for the use of fuel cells in the transportation sector is the high durability requirements 1–3. One of the key components that control the overall life time of a hydrogen fuel cell is the ionomer membrane that conducts the protons and allows the separation between the anode and the cathode. During fuel cell operation, the membrane is subjected to two categories of degradation: mechanical and chemical. These degradations lead to reduction in the performance, crossover of reactants between anode and cathode and ultimately total failure of the fuel cell. The mechanical degradation occurs when the membrane swells and shrinks under the variation of the local hydration level. This leads to fatigue of the ionomer structure and ultimately irreversible damage. However, under pure mechanical degradation the damage takes a very long time to occur 4,5. Sadeghi et al. 5 observed failure of the membrane after 20,000 of accelerated mechanical stress testing. This translates into a longer lifetime in comparison to what is observed in field operation 6. The chemical degradation on the other hand is caused by the presence of harmful chemicals such as OH radicals that attack the side chains and the main chains of the ionomer 7,8. Such attacks weaken the structural integrity of the membrane and make it prone to severe mechanical damage. Hence understanding the effect of combining both categories of membrane degradation is the key to accurate prediction of the time to failure of the fuel cell. In this work we propose a novel model that represents accurately the structural properties of the membrane and couples the chemical and the mechanical degradations to estimate when the ultimate failure is initiated. The model is based on a network of agglomerated fibrils corresponding to the basic building block of the membrane structure 9–11. The mechanical and chemical properties are defined for each fibril and probability functions are used to evaluate the likelihood of a fibril to break under certain operating conditions. The description of the fundamentals behind the approach will be presented. Two set of simulations will be presented and discussed. The first one corresponding to standard testing scenarios that were used to validate the model. The second set of results will highlight the impact of coupling both degradation mechanisms on the estimation of the failure initiation time. The main strengths of the model and the future development will be discussed as well. T. Sinigaglia, F. Lewiski, M. E. Santos Martins, and J. C. Mairesse Siluk, Int. J. Hydrogen Energy, 42, 24597–24611 (2017). T. Jahnke et al., J. Power Sources, 304, 207–233 (2016). P. Ahmadi and E. Kjeang, Int. J. Energy Res., 714–727 (2016). X. Huang et al., J. Polym. Sci. Part B Polym. Phys., 44, 2346–2357 (2006). A. Sadeghi Alavijeh et al., J. Electrochem. Soc., 162, F1461–F1469 (2015). N. Macauley et al., J. Power Sources, 336, 240–250 (2016). K. H. Wong and E. Kjeang, J. Electrochem. Soc., 161, F823–F832 (2014). K. H. Wong and E. Kjeang, ChemSusChem, 8, 1072–1082 (2015). P.-É. A. Melchy and M. H. Eikerling, J. Phys. Condens. Matter, 27, 325103–6 (2015). J. A. Elliott et al., Soft Matter, 7, 6820 (2011). L. Rubatat, G. Gebel, and O. Diat, Macromolecules, 37, 7772–7783 (2004).


2021 ◽  
Vol 66 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-13
Author(s):  
Wanyi Ng ◽  
Mrinalgouda Patil ◽  
Anubhav Datta

The objective of this paper is to study the impact of combining hydrogen fuel cells with lithium-ion batteries through an ideal power-sharing architecture to mitigate the poor range and endurance of battery powered electric vertical takeoff and landing (eVTOL) aircraft. The benefits of combining the two sources is first illustrated by a conceptual sizing of an electric tiltrotor for an urban air taxi mission of 75 mi cruise and 5 min hover. It is shown that an aircraft of 5000–6000 lb gross weight can carry a practical payload of 500 lb (two to three seats) with present levels of battery specific energy (150 Wh/kg) if only a battery–fuel cell hybrid power plant is used, combined in an ideal power-sharing manner, as long as high burst C-rate batteries are available (4–10 C). A power plant using batteries alone can carry less than half the payload; use of fuel cells alone cannot lift off the ground. Next, the operation of such a system is demonstrated using systematic hardware testing. The concepts of unregulated and regulated power-sharing architectures are described. A regulated architecture that can implement ideal power sharing is built up in a step-by-step manner. It is found only two switches and three DC-to-DC converters are necessary, and if placed appropriately, are sufficient to achieve the desired power flow. Finally, a simple power system model is developed, validated with test data and used to gain fundamental understanding of power sharing.


2006 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 155-164 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. Woudstra ◽  
T. P. van der Stelt ◽  
K. Hemmes

Energy conversion today is subject to high thermodynamic losses. About 50% to 90% of the exergy of primary fuels is lost during conversion into power or heat. The fast increasing world energy demand makes a further increase of conversion efficiencies inevitable. The substantial thermodynamic losses (exergy losses of 20% to 30%) of thermal fuel conversion will limit future improvements of power plant efficiencies. Electrochemical conversion of fuel enables fuel conversion with minimum losses. Various fuel cell systems have been investigated at the Delft University of Technology during the past 20 years. It appeared that exergy analyses can be very helpful in understanding the extent and causes of thermodynamic losses in fuel cell systems. More than 50% of the losses in high temperature fuel cell (molten carbonate fuel cell and solid oxide fuel cell) systems can be caused by heat transfer. Therefore system optimization must focus on reducing the need for heat transfer as well as improving the conditions for the unavoidable heat transfer. Various options for reducing the need for heat transfer are discussed in this paper. High temperature fuel cells, eventually integrated into gas turbine processes, can replace the combustion process in future power plants. High temperature fuel cells will be necessary to obtain conversion efficiencies up to 80% in the case of large scale electricity production in the future. The introduction of fuel cells is considered to be a first step in the integration of electrochemical conversion in future energy conversion systems.


2016 ◽  
Vol 9 (6) ◽  
pp. 2130-2142 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew G. Wright ◽  
Jiantao Fan ◽  
Benjamin Britton ◽  
Thomas Weissbach ◽  
Hsu-Feng Lee ◽  
...  

A benchmark hydroxide-conducting polymer is utilized in alkaline hydrogen fuel cell and water electrolyzer devices at 60 °C for >100 hours.


Author(s):  
Raluca-Andreea Felseghi ◽  
Florin Badea

Science has shown that there are two sustainable alternatives to providing energy needs: renewable energy resources and fuel cells-hydrogen-based energy, which will play a complementary role in securing global energy resources. By promoting the use of hydrogen-based energy technologies, as clean energy technologies for stationary applications, at the level of local communities, industrial and commercial communities, research topics in this field will help the practical development of sustainable and clean energy systems. This chapter provides an overview of fuel cells highlighting aspects related to fuel cell short history, the main components and operating principles of fuel cells, the main constructive fuel cell types, and the main ways of powering stationary applications through the hydrogen fuel cell technologies.


Author(s):  
F J Barclay

At the 2001 Grove Symposium on Fuel Cells attended by representatives of the world-wide fuel cell industry, fuel cells and fuel cells integrated with gas turbines were discussed. Combined heat and power (CHP) aspects were also discussed. Without exception, efficiency figures were irrationally based on the measured, Carnot-limited, lower calorific value (CV) of the fuel in energy units J. The rational basis, on the other hand, is the fuel chemical exergy (work units, Ws) calculated via an equilibrium diagram. In Joules experiment 1 Ws ≫ 1 J, where the irreversible ≫ must not become an = sign. A misnomer like potential energy (exergy) fits on the left of the diagram, CV on the right. Moreover credence was also given, at the symposium, to the popular misconception that a CHP system has an efficiency of the order of 80 per cent. An essential precursor to reading the paper is to grasp the theory of chemical equilibrium and equilibrium constants [3] as an aid to exploring the equilibrium diagram mentioned above.


2020 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 179-191
Author(s):  
M. Abdus Salam ◽  
Md Shehan Habib ◽  
Paroma Arefin ◽  
Kawsar Ahmed ◽  
Md Sahab Uddin ◽  
...  

Hydrogen fuel cell technology is now being extensively researched around the world to find a reliable renewable energy source. Global warming, national calamities, fossil-fuel shortages have drawn global attention to environment friendly and renewable energy source. The hydrogen fuel cell technology most certainly fits those requisites. New researches facilitate improving performance, endurance, cost-efficiency, and overcoming limitations of the fuel cells. The various factors affecting the features and the efficiency of a fuel cell must be explored in the course of advancement in a specific manner. Temperature is one of the most critical performance-changing parameters of Proton Exchange Membrane Fuel Cells (PEMFC). In this review paper, we have discussed the impact of temperature on the efficiency and durability of the hydrogen fuel cell, more precisely, on a Proton Exchange Membrane Fuel Cell (PEMFC). We found that increase in temperature increases the performance and efficiency, power production, voltage, leakage current, but decreases mass crossover and durability. But we concluded with the findings that an optimum temperature is required for the best performance.


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