4.7 Article

A novel distributed energy system using high-temperature proton exchange membrane fuel cell integrated with hybrid-energy heat pump

Journal

ENERGY CONVERSION AND MANAGEMENT
Volume 235, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.enconman.2021.113990

Keywords

Proton exchange membrane fuel cell; Hybrid-energy heat pump; Absorption-compression cycle; Heat recovery; Distributed energy

Funding

  1. Guangdong Basic and Applied Basic Research Foundation [2019A1515011177]
  2. Research Grants Council of Hong Kong [CityU 11212620, CityU 21201119]
  3. City University of Hong Kong [9610408]

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The study proposes a novel PEMFC distributed energy system integrated with a hybrid-energy heat pump, which can switch between a single absorption heat pump and a hybrid absorption compression heat pump based on waste heat availability. Optimization results in a maximum equivalent power density of 4.341 kW/m(2) in cooling mode and 5.357 kW/m(2) in heating mode for the integrated system.
Distributed energy systems based on proton exchange membrane fuel cell (PEMFC) pave a promising technological pathway to achieve carbon neutrality. The waste heat from PEMFC can be well recovered for cooling/heating, but additional systems are required if the available waste heat is not enough to meet the building cooling/heating demands. To achieve a dynamic supply-demand match efficiently and flexibly, this study proposes a novel PEMFC distributed energy system integrated with a hybrid-energy heat pump (HEHP). It can flexibly switch between a single absorption heat pump under sufficient waste heat and a hybrid absorption compression heat pump under deficient waste heat. The integrated PEMFC-HEHP system is characterized and optimized using a validated model under different working conditions and hybrid configurations. The equivalent power density and fuel cell efficiency can be improved by 18.5% and 7.9% with supply temperatures of -10-10 degrees C for cooling, and be improved by 54.8% and 20.3% with supply temperatures of 40-60 degrees C for heating. Optimization yields a maximum equivalent power density of 4.341 kW/m(2) in cooling mode and 5.357 kW/m(2) in heating mode, compared to 3.290 kW/m(2) of the individual PEMFC system. A higher absorption fraction enhances the PEMFC equivalent power while a higher compression fraction improves the HEHP cooling/heating capacity, the hybrid configuration needs to be determined by comprehensively considering the required cooling/heating loads and the available waste heat. The results can facilitate the better development of PEMFC distributed energy systems.

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