4.7 Article

Integration and optimization of methanol-reforming proton exchange membrane fuel cell system for distributed generation with combined cooling, heating and power

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION
Volume 411, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jclepro.2023.137342

Keywords

Distributed generation; Methanol -steam -reforming; Proton exchange membrane fuel cell; Combined cooling -heating -power generation; Simultaneous heat integration and flowsheet; optimization

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The methanol-steam-reforming proton exchange membrane fuel cell system is a promising option for distributed cogeneration. The proposed equation-based optimization framework integrates heat and flowsheet optimization for the combined cooling, heating, and power system based on this fuel cell. Applying this framework to a 1000 kWe system achieved significantly higher energy and exergy efficiency, along with reduced levelized cost of electricity compared to a conventional design.
The methanol-steam-reforming proton exchange membrane fuel cell system is an attractive option for distributed cogeneration due to its low emissions, quiet operation, and low-cost fuel storage. To further increase its energy efficiency, waste heat can be utilized for combined cooling, heating, and power generation. However, the additional equipment, processes, and streams required for cogeneration make the system design complex, with a large number of degrees of freedom. To address this challenge, we propose an equation-based optimization framework for the simultaneous heat integration and flowsheet optimization of the combined cooling, heating, and power system based on the methanol-steam-reforming proton exchange membrane fuel cell. The framework comprises a detailed modelling of methanol steam reforming reaction, fuel cell performance, cooling/heating cogeneration systems, heat integration, heat exchanger network synthesis and energetic-economic performance evaluation. Additionally, the framework incorporates the sizing of the corresponding equipment, including the total length of the reformer, scale of proton exchange membrane fuel cell stack, and absorption cooling apparatus. Furthermore, it takes into account the operating conditions, such as the temperature and pressure of methanol steam reforming reaction, the operating temperatures and pressures of the fuel cell stack and absorption cooling system. We apply the framework to a 1000 kWe combined cooling, heating, and power generation system, and the integrated design achieved an energy efficiency of 88.50% and a levelized cost of electricity of 0.2374 $/kWh. The results show that the simultaneous heat integration and flowsheet optimization can increase the system's energy efficiency by 5.45 percentage points, exergy efficiency by 2.22 percentage points, and decrease the levelized cost of electricity by 4.50% compared to a conventional design.

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