Skip to content
1900

Assessing the Potential of Hybrid Systems with Batteries, Fuel Cells and E-Fuels for Onboard Generation and Propulsion in Pleasure Vessels

Abstract

Electro-fuels (E-fuels) represent a potential solution for decarbonizing the maritime sector, including pleasure vessels. Due to their large energy requirements, direct electrification is not currently feasible. E-fuels, such as synthetic diesel, methanol, ammonia, methane and hydrogen, can be used in existing internal combustion engines or fuel cells in hybrid configurations with lithium batteries to provide propulsion and onboard electricity. This study confirms that there is no clear winner in terms of efficiency (the power-to-power efficiency of all simulated cases ranges from 10% to 30%), and the choice will likely be driven by other factors such as fuel cost, onboard volume/mass requirements and distribution infrastructure. Pure hydrogen is not a practical option due to its large storage necessity, while methanol requires double the storage volume compared to current fossil fuel solutions. Synthetic diesel is the most straightforward option, as it can directly replace fossil diesel, and should be compared with biofuels. CO2 emissions from E-fuels strongly depend on the electricity source used for their synthesis. With Italy’s current electricity mix, E-fuels would have higher impacts than fossil diesel, with potential increases between +30% and +100% in net total CO2 emissions. However, as the penetration of renewable energy increases in electricity generation, associated E-fuel emissions will decrease: a turning point is around 150 gCO2/kWhel.

Funding source: The University of Pisa’s contribution to this work was partially carried out within the MOST—Sustainable Mobility Center and received funding from the European Union Next- GenerationEU (Piano Nazionale di Ripresa E Resilienza (PNRR)—Missione 4 Componente 2, Investimento 1.4—D.D. 1033 17/06/2022, CN00000023). This manuscript reflects only the authors’ views and opinions; neither the European Union nor the European Commission can be considered responsible for them.
Related subjects: Applications & Pathways
Countries: Italy
Loading

Article metrics loading...

/content/journal6630
2024-12-20
2025-04-07
/content/journal6630
Loading
This is a required field
Please enter a valid email address
Approval was a Success
Invalid data
An Error Occurred
Approval was partially successful, following selected items could not be processed due to error