4.7 Article

Techno-economic analysis of hydrogen production electrically coupled to a hybrid desalination process

Journal

DESALINATION
Volume 539, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.desal.2022.115949

Keywords

Hydrogen production; Hybrid desalination; Water electrolysis; Techno-economic analysis; Exergy analysis

Funding

  1. National Research Foundation of Korea [NRF-2020R1F1A1061162]

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Climate change and resource scarcity have led to the need for eco-friendly alternatives to replace fossil fuels. This article proposes a small-scale paradigm that simultaneously produces pure water and hydrogen using hybrid desalination and water electrolysis, with the potential to decrease the cost of hydrogen production by reducing electricity prices.
Climate change and resource scarcity have gained prominence with an increase in the world's population, necessitating the replacement of fossil fuels with eco-friendly alternatives. Here, to produce hydrogen sustain-ably, a combination of hybrid desalination with water electrolysis, to simultaneously produce hydrogen and pure water (with 4 MW plant capacity), has been proposed. The desalination produces additional electricity, which is used for high-temperature steam electrolysis (HTSE) using a solid oxide electrolysis cell (SOEC), and water electrolysis using an alkaline electrolysis cell (AEC). Reducing the electricity price, which accounts for almost the entire cost of hydrogen production, could decrease the cost of producing hydrogen. The system was verified by process simulation and optimization, along with economic and sensitivity analyses. The levelized cost of pure water was $1.08-1.86 per ton of water (reasonable compared to previous studies); the levelized cost of hydrogen ($1.75-5.32 and $0.63-2.35 per kg of H-2 in SOEC and AEC, respectively) was significantly low, using the electricity generated by desalination. Therefore, this new small-scale paradigm producing pure water and hydrogen simultaneously could be an alternative to distributed hydrogen production, considering the difficulties of hydrogen storage and transportation.

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