Lecture9 - Energy Storage
Lecture9 - Energy Storage
Lecture9 - Energy Storage
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Need Of Energy Storage Devices
Solar power is an intermittent energy source, meaning that solar
power is not available at all times, and is normally supplemented
by storage or another energy source, for example with wind
power and hydropower.
Wind power is an intermittent energy source, meaning that wind
is not available at all times, and thus needs to be supplemented by
storage or another energy source, for example with solar power
and hydropower.
Under circumstances of peak power consumption, load
shedding is done to meet the grid power supply. Under these
condition one may like to switch to storage power supply.
From very small devices such as wrist watches to sophisticated
devices such as powering of space shuttles rely on power storage
devices. 2
Energy Storage Systems
Fuel Cells
Hydrogen production and Storage
Li-ion batteries
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About Fuel Cell
A fuel cell is an electrochemical device that converts the fuel into
an electric current. Electricity is generated through chemical
reactions between the fuel and an oxidant.
The reactants flow into the cell, and the reaction products flow
out of the cell while the electrolyte remains within it.
Electricity: Energy =
Hydrogen V·I·t
Fuel Cell Heat (byproduct)
Oxygen Water (byproduct)
PEM fuel cells are used primarily for transportation applications such as cars
and buses and some stationary applications due to their fast startup time, low
sensitivity to orientation, and favourable power-to-weight ratio.
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Solid Oxide Fuel Cells
The cell is consists of two porous electrodes
which sandwich an electrolyte.
O2 + 4e- 2O2-
The oxygen ions diffuse into the electrolyte material and migrate to the other
side of the cell where they encounter the anode.
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Solid Oxide Fuel Cells
The oxygen ions encounter the fuel
at the anode/electrolyte interface
and react catalytically, giving off
water, carbon dioxide, heat, and --
most importantly -- electrons.
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Components of SOFC
Electrolyte: Ceramic material, Yttrium-doped zirconium oxide (YSZ) is the
potential electrolyte in SOFCs because of its sufficient ionic conductivity,
chemical stability, and mechanical strength. The only drawback of stabilized YSZ
is the low ionic conductivity in the lower cell operation temperature regime,
below about 750oC.
Cathode: The oxidant gas is air or oxygen at the SOFC cathode. Calcium or
Strontium substituted Lanthanum manganite has good electronic conduction,
porosity, thermal stability and thermal expansion match to YSZ.
Anode: Nickel-YSZ composites are the most commonly used anode materials for
SOFCs. Nickel is an excellent catalyst for fuel oxidation. YSZ in the anode
constrains nickel aggregation, decreases the effective thermal expansion
coefficient bringing it closer to that of the electrolyte, and provides better
adhesion of the anode with the electrolyte.
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Design Configurations of SOFC
Two design configurations for
SOFCs have emerged:
A planar design: In the planar design,
the components are assembled in flat
stacks, with air and fuel flowing
through channels built into the
cathode and anode.
Planar design SOFC
A tubular design :In the tubular design,
components are assembled in the form
of a hollow tube, with the cell
constructed in layers around a tubular
cathode. Air flows through the inside of
the tube and fuel flows around the
exterior.
Tubular design SOFC 13
Optional
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Main markets for fuel cell technology
1. Stationary power includes any application in which the fuel
cells are operated at a fixed location, either for primary or for
backup power, or for combined heat and power generation(CHP).
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HYDROGEN
PRODUCTION
AND
STORAGE
INTRODUCTION
Hydrogen can be produced from a variety of feedstocks. These
include fossil resources such as natural gas and coal and also
renewable resources such as biomass and water with input from
renewable energy sources (e.g. sunlight, wind, wave or hydro-power).
The above reaction is exothermic and heat is generated. Hence no external heating is
required and comparatively more compact design of reactor is feasible. The CO
produced is further converted to H2 as described in equation (2).
3. Autothermal reforming
1. Water electrolysis
2. Photo-electrolysis
3. Photo-biological production
4. High-temperature water decomposition.
Water electrolysis
Water electrolysis is the process whereby water is split into
hydrogen and oxygen through the application of electrical energy,
as in equation (5).
The three principal forms of hydrogen storage (gas, liquid, and solid),
with a focus on the technology gaps and R&D priorities related to the
various approaches will be discussed.
GASEOUS HYDROGEN
The most common method to store hydrogen in gaseous form is in
steel tanks, although lightweight composite tanks designed to
endure higher pressures are also becoming more and more
common.
Cryogas, gaseous hydrogen cooled to near cryogenic
temperatures, is another alternative that can be used to increase
the volumetric energy density of gaseous hydrogen.
A more novel method to store hydrogen gas at high pressures is
to use glass microspheres.
Two of the most promising methods to store hydrogen gas
under high pressure:
Composite tanks
Glass microspheres.
Composite Hydrogen Storage tanks
Their main disadvantages are the large physical volume required (which does not meet
targets).
There are also some safety issues that still have not been resolved, such as the problem of
rapid loss of H2 in an accident.
Glass Microspheres for Hydrogen Storage
The basic concept for hydrogen gas storage in glass microspheres can be described in
three steps:
Another challenge is the need to supply heat at temperatures higher than those
available from the PEM fuel cell (70-80 °C). The required high temperature (300 °C) also
makes rapid response-control difficult.
Advantages
Glass microspheres have the potential to be inherently safe as they store H2
at a relatively low pressure onboard and are suitable for conformable tanks.
1. Cryogenic Hydrogen
The theoretical gravimetric density of LH2 is 100%, but only 20 wt. % H2 of this can
be achieved in practical hydrogen storage systems today. This means that liquid
hydrogen has a much better energy density than the pressurised gas solutions.
Main disadvantage with LH2 is the boil-off loss during dormancy, and requirement of
super-insulated cryogenic containers for storage.
The main advantage with LH2 is the high storage density that can be reached at
relatively low pressures.
Pure H2 molecular physisorption has been clearly demonstrated, but is useful only
at cryogenic temperatures (up to 6 wt.% H2), and extremely high surface area
carbons are required.
Pure atomic H-chemisorption has been demonstrated to 8 wt.% H2, but the
covalent-bound H is liberated only at impractically high temperatures (above 400
°C).
The safety aspects with all storage options, particularly the novel
hydride storage options, must not be underestimated.
Definition of Battery
A battery is a device that converts chemical energy to electrical
energy.
A battery is composed of two electrodes (cathode and anode)
and an ionically conductive material called electrolyte.
The most common primary cells that are being used commercially,
Zinc-MnO2 (1.5 V) and Li-MnO2 (3.0 V).
Depending upon their usage, different shape and sizes are available
in market like, button and coin cells are widely used in watches,
calculators, CD players and other portable appliances.
Different kinds of primary batteries and their
applications
Primary Merits and/or applications
Zinc-carbon battery Midium cost, used in light drain application.
Zinc-chloride battery Similar to zinc-carbon but slightly longer life.
Long life, widely used in both light-drain and heavy-drain
Alkaline/manganese battery application.
– Toxic 600
500
Li-ion
– reduced memory effect − Less-toxic 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400
e- e-
- +
Li+
charge
e- e-
Li+ discharge
No memory effect.
Internal resistance
The internal resistance of lithium-ion batteries is high compared to other
rechargeable chemistries such as nickel-metal hydride and nickel-cadmium.
Internal resistance increases with both cycling and age. Rising internal
resistance causes the voltage at the terminals to drop under load, which
reduces the maximum current draw. Eventually increasing resistance means
that the battery can no longer operate for an adequate period.
Safety Issues: Li-ion batteries are not as durable as nickel metal hydride or nickel-
cadmium designs and can be dangerous if mistreated. They may suffer cell
rupture if overheated or overcharged.
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