Denmark
Overview of International Activities in Hydrogen System Safety in IEA Hydrogen TCP Task 43
Sep 2023
Publication
Safety and reliability have long been recognized as key issues for the development commercialization and implementation of new technologies and infrastructure and hydrogen systems are no exception to this rule. Reliability engineering quantitative risk assessment (QRA) and knowledge exchange each play a key role in proactive addressing safety – before problems happen – and help us learn from problems if they happen. Many international research activities are focusing on both reliability and risk assessment for hydrogen systems. However the element of knowledge exchange is sometimes less visible. To support international collaboration and knowledge exchange the International Energy Agency (IEA) convened a new Technology Collaboration Program “Task 43: Safety and Regulatory Aspects of Emerging Large Scale Hydrogen Energy Applications” started in June 2022. Within Task 43 Subtask E focuses on Hydrogen Systems Safety. This paper discusses the structure of the Hydrogen Systems Safety subtask and the aligned activities and introduces opportunities for future work.
QRA of Hydrogen Vehicles in a Road Tunnel
Sep 2023
Publication
Hydrogen energy is recognized by many European governments as an important part of the development to achieve a more sustainable energy infrastructure. Great efforts are spent to build up a hydrogen supply chain to support the increasing number of hydrogen-powered vehicles. Naturally these vehicles will use the common traffic infrastructure. Thus it has to be ensured these infrastructures are capable to withstand the hazards and associated risks that may arise from these new technologies. In order to have an appropriate assessment tool for hydrogen vehicles transport through tunnels a new QRA methodology is developed and presented here. In Europe the PIARC is a very common approach. It is therefore chosen as a starting point for the new methodology. It provides data on traffic statistics accident frequencies tunnel geometries including certain prevention and protection measures. This approach is enhanced by allowing better identification of hazards and their respective sources for hydrogen vehicles. A detailed analysis of the accident scenarios that are unique for hydrogen vehicles hereunder the initiating events severity of collision types that may result in a release of hydrogen gas in a tunnel and the location of such an accident are included. QRA enables the assessment and evaluation of scenarios involving external fires or vehicles that burst into fire because of an accident or other fire sources. Event Tree Analysis is the technique used to estimate the event frequencies. The consequence analysis includes the hazards from blast waves hydrogen jet fires DDT.
Optimal Expansion of a Multi-domain Virtual Power Plant for Green Hydrogen Production to Decarbonise Seaborne Passenger Transportation
Nov 2023
Publication
Many industrialised nations recently concentrated their focus on hydrogen as a viable option for the decarbonisation of fossil-intensive sectors including maritime transportation. A sustainable alternative to the conventional production of hydrogen based on fossil hydrocarbons is water electrolysis powered by renewable energy sources. This paper presents a detailed techno-economic optimisation model for sizing an electrolyser and a hydrogen storage embedded in a multi-domain virtual power plant to produce green hydrogen for seaborne passenger transportation. We base our numerical analysis on three years of historical data from a renewable-dominated 60/10 kV substation on the Danish island of Bornholm and on data for ferries to the mainland of Sweden. Our analysis shows that an electrolyser system serves as a valuable flexibility asset on the electrical demand side while supporting the thermal management of the district heating system and contributing to meeting the ferries hydrogen demand. With a sized electrolyser of 9.63 MW and a hydrogen storage of 1.45 t the hydrogen assets are able to take up a large share of the local excess electricity generation. The waste heat of the electrolyser delivers a significant share of 21.4% of the annual district heating demand. Moreover the substation can supply 26% of the hydrogen demand of the ferries from local resources. We further examine the sensitivity of the asset sizing towards investment costs electrolyser efficiency and hydrogen market prices.
Above-ground Hydrogen Storage: A State-of-the-art Review
Nov 2024
Publication
Hydrogen is increasingly recognized as a clean energy alternative offering effective storage solutions for widespread adoption. Advancements in storage electrolysis and fuel cell technologies position hydrogen as a pathway toward cleaner more efficient and resilient energy solutions across various sectors. However challenges like infrastructure development cost-effectiveness and system integration must be addressed. This review comprehensively examines above-ground hydrogen storage technologies and their applications. It highlights the importance of established hydrogen fuel cell infrastructure particularly in gaseous and LH2 systems. The review favors material-based storage for medium- and long-term needs addressing challenges like adverse thermodynamics and kinetics for metal hydrides. It explores hydrogen storage applications in mobile and stationary sectors including fuel-cell electric vehicles aviation maritime power generation systems off-grid stations power backups and combined renewable energy systems. The paper underscores hydrogen’s potential to revolutionize stationary applications and co-generation systems highlighting its significant role in future energy landscapes.
Renewable Fuel Production and the Impact of Hydrogen Infrastructure - A Case Study of the Nordics
Apr 2024
Publication
Hard-to-electrify sectors will require renewable fuels to facilitate the green transition in the future. Therefore it is crucial to identify promising production locations while taking into account the local biomass resources variable renewable energy sources and the synergies between sectors. In this study investments and dispatch operations are optimised of a large catalogue of renewable fuel production technologies in the opensource software SpineOpt and this is soft-linked to the comprehensive energy system model Balmorel. We analyse future production pathways by comparing various levels of hydrogen infrastructure including large-scale hydrogen storage and assess system impacts. The results indicate that methanol may provide synergies in its multipurpose use as an early (2030-2040) shipping fuel and later as an aviation fuel through further refining if ammonia becomes more competitive (2050). We furthermore show that a hydrogen infrastructure increases the competitiveness of non-flexible hydrogen-based fuel production technologies. Offshore electrolysis hubs decrease energy system impacts in scenarios with 105 TWh of Nordic hydrogen export. However hydrogen export scenarios are much costlier compared to scenarios with no export unless a high hydrogen price is received. Finally we find that emission taxes in the range of 250-265 euro/tCO2 will be necessary for renewable fuels to become competitive.
Green Hydrogen Techno-economic Assessments from Simulated and Measured Solar Photovoltaic Power Profiles
Nov 2024
Publication
Studies estimating the production cost of hydrogen-based fuels known as e-fuels often use renewable power profile time series obtained from open-source simulation tools that rely on meteorological reanalysis and satellite data such as Renewables.ninja or PVGIS. These simulated time series contain errors compared to real on-site measured data which are reflected in e-fuels cost estimates plant design and operational performance increasing the risk of inaccurate plant design and business models. Focusing on solar-powered e-fuels this study aims to quantify these errors using high-quality on-site power production data. A state-of-the-art optimization techno-economic model was used to estimate e-fuel production costs by utilizing either simulated or high-quality measured PV power profiles across four sites with different climates. The results indicate that in cloudy climates relying on simulated data instead of measured data can lead to an underestimation of the fuel production costs by 36 % for a hydrogen user requiring a constant supply considering an original error of 1.2 % in the annual average capacity factor. The cost underestimation can reach 25 % for a hydrogen user operating between 40 % and 100 % load and 17.5 % for a fully flexible user. For comparison cost differences around 20 % could also result from increasing the electrolyser or PV plant costs by around 55 % which highlights the importance of using high-quality renewable power profiles. To support this an open-source collaborative repository was developed to facilitate the sharing of measured renewable power profiles and provide tools for both time series analysis and green hydrogen techno-economic assessments.
Efficient and Low-emission Approaches for Cost-effective Hydrogen, Power, and Heat Production Based on Chemical Looping Combustion
Nov 2024
Publication
Hydrogen production has recently attracted much attention as an energy carrier and sector integrator (i.e. electricity and transport) in future decarbonized smart energy systems. At the same time power production is highly valued in energy systems as other sectors like transport and heating become electrified. This work compares two different low-emission systems to produce electricity hydrogen and heat. The proposed systems are based on chemical looping combustion combined with biomass gasification (CLC-BG) and steam methane reforming (CLC-SMR) both benefiting from heat integration between chemical looping combustion and downstream processes. A full process simulation is carried out in Aspen Plus for both systems and detailed modeling is performed for chemical looping combustion. The overall thermal efficiency is calculated to be 71.1 % for CLC-BG and 76.4 % for CLC-SMR. Co-feeding methane into the biomass gasification process of CLC-BG leads to an enhanced overall efficiency. In comparison to CLC-BG CLC-SMR exhibits greater potential in terms of power and hydrogen generation resulting in a higher exergy efficiency of 58.3 % as opposed to 44.6 %. Assuming market prices of 5.2 USD/GJ for biomass and 9.1 USD/GJ for natural gas the lowest minimum hydrogen sale price is estimated to be 4 USD/kg for CLC-SMR.
Sustainability Assessment of Alternative Energy Fuels for Aircrafts—A Life Cycle Analysis Approach
Nov 2024
Publication
Aviation is of crucial importance for the transportation sector and fundamental for the economy as it facilitates trade and private travel. Nonetheless this sector is responsible for a great amount of global carbon dioxide emissions exceeding 920 million tonnes annually. Alternative energy fuels (AEFs) can be considered as a promising solution to tackle this issue with the potential to lower greenhouse gas emissions and reduce reliance on fossil fuels in the aviation industry. A life cycle analysis is performed considering an aircraft running on conventional jet fuel and various alternative fuels (biojet methanol and DME) including hydrogen and ammonia. The comparative assessment investigates different fuel production pathways including the following: JETA-1 and biojet fuels via hydrotreated esters and fatty acids (HEFAs) as well as hydrogen and ammonia employing water electrolysis using wind and solar photovoltaic collectors. The outputs of the assessment are quantified in terms of carbon dioxide equivalent emissions acidification eutrophication eco-toxicity human toxicity and carcinogens. The life cycle phases included the following: (i) the construction maintenance and disposal of airports; (ii) the operation and maintenance of aircrafts; and (iii) the production transportation and utilisation of aviation fuel in aircrafts. The results suggest that hydrogen is a more environmentally benign alternative compared to JETA-1 biojet fuel methanol DME and ammonia.
Modeling the Long-term Evolution of the Italian Power Sector: The Role of Renewable Resources and Energy Storage Facilities
Feb 2024
Publication
The aim of this study is to investigate the long-term planning of the Italian power sector from 2021 to 2050. The key role of photovoltaic and wind technologies in combination with power-to-power systems based on hydrogen and batteries is investigated. An updated version of the OSeMOSYS tool is used which employs a clustering method for the representation of time-varying input data. First the potential of variable renewable energy sources (VRES) is assessed. A sensitivity analysis is also performed on the temporal resolution of the model to determine an adequate trade-off between the computation time and the accuracy of the results. Then a technoeconomic optimization scenario is carried out resulting in a total net present cost of about 233.7 B€. A high penetration of VRES technologies is foreseen by 2050 with a total VRES installed capacity of 272.9 GW (mainly photovoltaic and onshore wind). Batteries are found to be the preferable energy storage solution in the first part of the energy transition while the hydrogen storage starts to be convenient from about the year 2040. Indeed the role of hydrogen storage becomes fundamental as the VRES penetration increases thanks to its cost-effective long-term storage capability. By 2050 74.6 % of electricity generation will be based on VRES which will also enable a significant reduction in CO2 emissions of about 87 %.
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