Production and use of low grade hydrogen for fuel cell ... · System efficiency > 30% ... Roadmap...
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Production and use of low grade hydrogen for fuel
cell telecom applications
Fuel cells and hydrogen in transportation applications
9.10.2017, Espoo, Finland
Pauli Koski, VTT

29/10/2017
Outline
1. On-site hydrogen production from liquid hydrocarbons
Background
H2 production and purification
Case: Bioethanol fueled system
2. Applications in transport sector
Distributed/on-board H2 generation
By-product gas upgrading
3. Summary

1. On-site hydrogen
production from liquid
hydrocarbons

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Background and motivation
In applications where electricity is scarcely available,
diesel generators are still the de facto standard
Back-up power for critical infrastructure:
Telecom, hospitals, military, …
Off-grid power:
Mines, construction sites, telecom, …
Reductions in CO2 emissions are needed
Particulate and NOx emissions are a problem in
densely populated areas
Base station at Ridnitšohkka
Lapland Finland*
Pictures: * https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ridnit%C5%A1ohkkan_tukiasema.jpg
** https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Aurora_Diesel_Generator.png
Diesel generator for
back-up power**

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Background and motivation
H2 fuel cells provide a solution to generate
power without harmful emissions
H2 infrastructure not be available allover
Logistics cost is still an issue!
Liquid hydrocarbons + on-site H2 generation
Lower logistics costs in remote sites
Methanol & ethanol as common fuels
Fuel processing system needed
CO2 emitted in the process
Fuel cell powered
back-up system
for telecom
applications*
(Ballard/Idatech)
Picture: * https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:FuelCellSystem.jpg
Two 50 L cylinders of H2
@ 200 bar : 198.8 MJ
10 L of ethanol (92.4 w-%
EtOH): 186.6 MJ

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Fuel cells on telecom market - PEMFC based
Proton exchange membrane fuel cells (PEMFCs)
Proton conducting polymer membrane as electrolyte
High power density, 50 - 60 % efficiency, 60 - 100 °C
Uses hydrogen as primary fuel (1 - 20 ppm CO)
Direct Methanol Fuel Cell (DMFC)
Can use methanol directly as liquid fuel
Lower power density, 40 - 60 °C
10 - 500 W, ~25 % efficiency, 5000 h lifetime
Reformed Methanol Fuel Cell (RMFC)
Internal methanol reformer and high temperature
PEMFC stack, 100 - 200 °C
35 - 45 % efficiency 2 - 10 kW scale, 5000 h lifetime
Pictures: * https://www.efoy-pro.com/sites/default/files/161018_data_sheet_efoy_pro_12000_duo_en.pdf
** http://serenergy.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/H3-2500-5000-48V_datasheet_v2.0-0916.pdf

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Fuel processing - On-site H2 generation from liquid hydrocarbons
Reforming
Splitting the primary fuel into H2 and CO
Steam reforming (SR), partial oxidation
(POx), autothermal reforming (ATR)
Synthesis gas conditioning
Water Gas Shift (WGS)
CO + H2O → CO2 + H2
Polishing
Pressure Swing Adsorption (PSA)
Preferential Oxidation (PrOx)
Permeable membranes
With PEM fuel cells, CO level is crucial!
Polishing
Conditioning
Reforming
PEMFC
Fuel
~10 % CO
~1 % CO
<< 100 ppm
syngas
H2

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Development of an integrated power system
Crude bioethanol as fuel
Cost < 2 500 €/kW @ 500 units
System efficiency > 30%
System lifetime > 20 000 h
Extensive laboratory testing
and limited field trial (~1000 h)
Roadmap for commercialization
3.5 years EU project 5/2014 – 10/2017
4.6 M€ budget, funded by FCH JU
Coordinated by VTT, 5 partners
PEMBeyond - PEMFC system and low-grade bioethanol processor
development for back-up and off-grid power applications

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Reformed Ethanol Fuel Cell: 2 kW H2 Generator + 7 kW Fuel Cell

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Conclusions: Reformed Ethanol Fuel Cell prototype
For short duration back-up applications (<100 h/year), diesel
generator wins (hydrogen fueled PEMFC also an option!)
Compared to diesel generator in off-grid applications (20 000 h),
reformed ethanol system offers same life cycle cost, and 63% of the
CO2 emissions with market bioethanol
Bridging the gap between CO level in produced hydrogen and the
PEMFC stack CO tolerance has required large efforts
Very efficient PSA adsorbent developed, surpassing any
commercial alternatives, ~10 ppm CO vs. 0.2 ppm
Fuel cell and H2 production systems can be used separately
Due to flexibility of the PSA and SR catalyst, can be also applied to
methanol or methane as fuel feed, not only ethanol

2. Applications in
transport sector

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Distributed and on-board hydrogen generation
Hydrogen refueling stations (HRSs):
Fuel flexibility: Methanol, Ethanol, Methane
The same hydrogen generator may be used for
the fuel that is locally available
Heavy duty transport:
Replacing diesel engines in marine vessels,
locomotives and trucks
Electrification not possible with batteries
Liquid fuels easier to store and have higher
energy density
Fuel processing system takes more space,
viable on long distances without refueling
Picture: * US Department of Energy: http://www.flickr.com/photos/[email protected]/9787447046
Shell HRS and GM fuel cell vehicle*

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By-product gas upgrading
Chlor-alkali plants in Europe
293 735 tons of by-product H2 ≈ 1 Mtoe (2014)
Commonly vented or used for heat production
Quality not good enough for automotive, but
may be used for stationary fuel cells
PSA + low quality H2 feed → Automotive H2 fuel
University of Porto developed pressure swing
adsorbent can easily upgrade the gas stream
1 MW worth of by-product hydrogen → 200 fuel
cell vehicles*
Replaces fossil fuels, more income to chlor-
alkali industry
359 Mtoe consumed in transport sector (2015)
* 30 kW per vehicle, 4 hours per day
Lab scale PSA unit used at
University of Porto.

3. Summary

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Summary
On-site/on-board production of hydrogen allows the use of easily
transported and stored fuels in variety of applications
Compared to combustion, higher efficiency, lower air pollution
Fuel processing system needs space
The fuel needs to be produced in a sustainable way
If electricity and/or hydrogen infrastructure is available, these
should be primarily used
Liquid hydrocarbons only for remote applications / long
distances, where diesel engines/generators are currently used
Hydrogen production and purification technology may be applied for
distributed hydrogen generation from methane/methanol/ethanol or
to upgrade low quality hydrogen streams

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Aknowledgement
The research leading to these results has received funding from
the European Union's Seventh Framework Programme
(FP7/2007-2013) for the Fuel Cells and Hydrogen Joint
Technology Initiative under grant agreement n° 621218.
We wish to thank HyGear for their collaboration with PSA unit
manufacturing, and St1 and Altia for providing bioethanol samples

Thank you for
your interest!
http://pembeyond.eu/
Contact person:
Pauli Koski, VTT
+358 40 687 8638