Optimization of Residential Hydrogen Facilities with Waste Heat Recovery: Economic Feasibility across Various European Cities
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Motivation
1.2. Literature Review
1.3. Research Gap and Contribution
- The development of an LP optimization formulation that determines the optimal capacities for all the components of residential solar–hydrogen systems involving waste heat recovery. This formulation aims to boost the owner’s economic returns, thereby enhancing the economic viability of residential hydrogen investments. It guarantees global optimality and avoids the pitfalls of local optima. Additionally, it incorporates an annual optimization horizon to account for all the temporal variations—hourly, daily, and seasonal—in solar variations and electric and thermal loads.
- A preliminary techno-economic feasibility assessment of residential solar–hydrogen systems across various European regions, which considers the diverse photovoltaic and thermal load profiles characteristic of different European locales.
- It introduces a novel incentive policy that allows owners of solar–hydrogen systems to inject up to 20% of their total solar power output directly into the grid, bypassing hydrogen storage. This policy enables owners to capitalize on selling excess PV power during peak midday hours instead of curtailing it. Moreover, it facilitates a reduction in the size and cost of the electrolyzer. This strategy could significantly enhance investment in residential hydrogen systems, increase their adoption, and reduce costs more sustainably than traditional subsidy policies [21] that are designed to promote a hydrogen economy.
2. Proposed Optimization Approach
2.1. Objective Function
2.2. Constraints
- ▪
- Constant ELZ and FC Efficiencies: Despite evidence that the efficiencies of the ELZ and FC vary with current and temperature [14,26], we assume constant efficiencies to facilitate a linear problem formulation. This assumption simplifies the analysis by disregarding the influence of current and temperature variations on the ELZ and FC efficiencies.
- ▪
- No Heat Storage: The model does not account for the storage of heat. Heat generated by the ELZ and FC is either utilized within the home or dissipated externally.
- ▪
- ▪
- No Degradation and Aging: The model assumes a constant ELZ and FC efficiency throughout the facility’s operational life, despite a documented degradation rate of 0.19% per 1000 h [19].
- ▪
- No Heat Loss in Pipes: Given that the study focuses on household installations, where the heat is produced and consumed locally, the heat pipes are presumed to be very short. Consequently, heat losses through the pipes are considered negligible.
3. Results
4. Conclusions, Discussion, and Future Research
4.1. Conclusions and Discussion
4.2. Shortcomings and Future Research
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
ELZ | electrolyzer |
FC | fuel cell |
FC-CHP | Fuel Cell Combined Heat and Power |
PV | photovoltaic |
DH | distinct heat |
HE | heat exchanger |
LP | linear programming |
NPC | net present cost |
HHV | Higher Heating Value (for Hydrogen) |
h | hours |
y | years |
DPP | direct photovoltaic penetration |
Notations
The notation ^ denotes a constant pre-specified variable. All variables without the notation ^ denote optimization (decision) variables. |
Nomenclature
Installed (nominal) power of photovoltaics (kW) | |
Per unit power of photovoltaics at time t (pu) | |
Power of photovoltaics at time t (kW) | |
Installed power of hydrogen tank (kWh) | |
Installed power of Fuel cell (kW) | |
Installed power of electrolyzer (kW) | |
Installed power of waste heat recovery system of electrolyzer (kW) | |
Installed power of waste heat recovery system of fuel cell (kW) | |
Cost of solar installation (EUR/kW) | |
Cost of hydrogen tank (EUR/kWh) | |
Cost of fuel cell (EUR/kW) | |
Cost of electrolyzer (EUR/kW) | |
Cost of waste heat recovery system (EUR/kW) | |
Solar power injected to the grid at time t (kW) | |
Solar power injected to the home at time t (kW) | |
Purchased heat power at time t (kW) | |
Heat power produced from fuel cell at time t (kW) | |
Heat power produced from electrolyzer at time t (kW) | |
Electric power produced from electrolyzer at time t (kW) | |
Electric power produced from fuel cell at time t (kW) | |
Power supplied to the home from the electric grid at t (kW) | |
Total electric load of the home at t (kW) | |
Heat demand of the home at t (kW) | |
) | |
) | |
) | |
Input power to hydrogen tank at time t (kW) | |
Output power of hydrogen tank at time t (kW) | |
Energy stored in the hydrogen tank at time t (kWh) | |
Efficiency of fuel cell | |
Efficiency of electrolyzer |
Appendix A
- -
- Total Cost .
- -
- Linearized Total Cost for .
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Parameter | Description | Value |
---|---|---|
Heating threshold (°C) | Temperature below which heating is required | 22 |
Heating power (kW/°C) | Heat per temperature drop below the heating threshold | 1 |
Smoothing (days−1) | Constant for building’s thermal inertia | 0.5 |
Solar gains (°C per W/m2) | The influence that sunshine has on the building’s temperature | 0.01 |
Wind chill (°C per m/s) | The influence that wind has on the building’s temperature | −0.2 |
Humidity discomfort (°C per g/kg) | The influence that humidity has on the perceived temperature | 0.05 |
Heraklion | Athens | Madrid | Vienna | Berlin | Copenhagen |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
19.41% | 18.59% | 20.55% | 13.41% | 11.47% | 10.69% |
City | Annual Electricity (kWh) | Annual Heat (kWh) | NPC (Thousand EUR) |
---|---|---|---|
Heraklion | 28,996 | 35,368 | 204.12 |
Athens | 28,996 | 44,674 | 222.73 |
Madrid | 28,996 | 66,431 | 266.24 |
Vienna | 28,996 | 88,453 | 310.29 |
Berlin | 28,996 | 90,710 | 314.80 |
Copenhagen | 28,996 | 98,458 | 330.30 |
City | NPC (Thousand EUR) | Photovoltaic Capacity (kW) | Electrolyzer Capacity (kW) | Fuel Cell Capacity (kW) | Hydrogen Tank (kWh) | Electrolyzer Heat Exchanger (kW) | Fuel Cell Heat Exchanger (kW) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Heraklion | 179.18 | 12.90 | 4.57 | 1.02 | 44.10 | - | - |
Athens | 200.05 | 12.02 | 4.14 | 0.81 | 40.77 | - | - |
Madrid | 238.80 | 15.42 | 6.43 | 1.48 | 53.03 | - | - |
Vienna | 299.00 | 7.73 | 0.98 | 0.14 | 8.10 | - | - |
Berlin | 306.16 | 6.57 | 0 | 0 | 0 | - | - |
Copenhagen | 322.57 | 6.87 | 0 | 0 | 0 | - | - |
Parameter | Description | Value | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Cost of solar installation (EUR/kW) | 1200 EUR/kW | [32] | |
Cost of hydrogen tank (EUR/kWh) | 10.5 EUR/kWh (≈350 EUR/kg H2) | [17,33] | |
Cost of fuel cell (EUR/kW) | 1684 EUR/kW | [17] | |
Cost of electrolyzer (EUR/kW) | 1295 EUR/kW | [17] | |
Cost of waste heat recovery system (EUR/kW) | 1200 EUR/kW | See Appendix A | |
- | Annual Operation and maintenance | 0.03 × installation cost | - |
) | 0.23 EUR/kWh | [31] | |
) | 0.10 EUR/kWh | [28] | |
) | 0.10 EUR/kWh | [34] | |
Efficiency of fuel cell (HHV) | 50% | [17,35] | |
Efficiency of electrolyzer (HHV) | 76% | [19,35] | |
Lifetime | PV: 20 years | [32] | |
ELZ: 80,000 h ≈ 20 years | [3,19,35] | ||
FC: 80,000 h ≈ 20 years | [35,36] |
City | NPC (Thousand EUR) | Photovoltaic Capacity (kW) | Electrolyzer Capacity (kW) | Fuel Cell Capacity (kW) | Hydrogen Tank (kWh) | Electrolyzer Heat Exchanger (kW) | Fuel Cell Heat Exchanger (kW) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Heraklion | 176.49 | 15.37 | 5.83 | 1.37 | 58.30 | 1.08 | 0.50 |
Athens | 197.95 | 14.12 | 5.21 | 1.06 | 56.77 | 0.91 | 0.38 |
Madrid | 233.33 | 20.14 | 9.05 | 2.08 | 105.64 | 1.73 | 0.83 |
Vienna | 298.34 | 9.39 | 2.07 | 0.30 | 20.01 | 0.39 | 0.11 |
Berlin | 306.10 | 7.06 | 0.44 | 0.05 | 4.14 | 0.08 | 0.02 |
Copenhagen | 322.57 | 6.87 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
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Pompodakis, E.E.; Ahmed, A.; Orfanoudakis, G.I.; Karapidakis, E.S. Optimization of Residential Hydrogen Facilities with Waste Heat Recovery: Economic Feasibility across Various European Cities. Processes 2024, 12, 1933. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr12091933
Pompodakis EE, Ahmed A, Orfanoudakis GI, Karapidakis ES. Optimization of Residential Hydrogen Facilities with Waste Heat Recovery: Economic Feasibility across Various European Cities. Processes. 2024; 12(9):1933. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr12091933
Chicago/Turabian StylePompodakis, Evangelos E., Arif Ahmed, Georgios I. Orfanoudakis, and Emmanuel S. Karapidakis. 2024. "Optimization of Residential Hydrogen Facilities with Waste Heat Recovery: Economic Feasibility across Various European Cities" Processes 12, no. 9: 1933. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr12091933
APA StylePompodakis, E. E., Ahmed, A., Orfanoudakis, G. I., & Karapidakis, E. S. (2024). Optimization of Residential Hydrogen Facilities with Waste Heat Recovery: Economic Feasibility across Various European Cities. Processes, 12(9), 1933. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr12091933