Skip to content
VuFind
  • 0 Items in e-Shelf (Full)
  • History
  • User Account
  • Logout
  • User Account
  • Help
    • English
    • Deutsch
  • Books & more
  • Articles & more
  • JuSER
Advanced
 
  • Literature Request
  • Cite this
  • Email this
  • Export
    • Export to RefWorks
    • Export to EndNoteWeb
    • Export to EndNote
    • Export to MARC
    • Export to MARCXML
    • Export to BibTeX
  • Favorites
  • Add to e-Shelf Remove from e-Shelf



QR Code
This title appears in the Scientific Report : 2020 

A Techno-Economic Perspective on Solar-to-Hydrogen Concepts through 2025

A Techno-Economic Perspective on Solar-to-Hydrogen Concepts through 2025

The transition towards a renewable energy-based society is challenged by spatial and temporal imbalances of energy demand and supply. Storage properties and versatility may favor hydrogen to serve as the linking element between renewable energy generation and a variety of sector coupling options. Th...

More

Saved in:
Personal Name(s): Grube, Thomas (Corresponding author)
Reul, Julian / Reuss, Markus / Calnan, Sonya / Monnerie, Nathalie / Schlatmann, Rutger / Sattler, Christian / Robinius, Martin / Stolten, Detlef
Contributing Institute: Technoökonomische Systemanalyse; IEK-3
Published in: Sustainable energy & fuels, 4 (2020) 11, S. 5818 - 5834
Imprint: Cambridge Royal Society of Chemistry 2020
DOI: 10.1039/D0SE00896F
Document Type: Journal Article
Research Program: Energie System 2050
Electrolysis and Hydrogen
Link: Published on 2020-10-09. Available in OpenAccess from 2021-10-09.
Restricted
Published on 2020-10-09. Available in OpenAccess from 2021-10-09.
Publikationsportal JuSER
Please use the identifier: http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/D0SE00896F in citations.
Please use the identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/2128/26868 in citations.

  • Description
  • Staff View

The transition towards a renewable energy-based society is challenged by spatial and temporal imbalances of energy demand and supply. Storage properties and versatility may favor hydrogen to serve as the linking element between renewable energy generation and a variety of sector coupling options. This paper examines four alternative solar-based hydrogen production concepts based on concentrated solar (CSP) or photovoltaic (PV) power generation and solid oxide (SOE) or polymer electrolyte membrane (PEM) electrolysis, namely, CSP-SOE and CSP-PEM, as well as PV-PEM concepts with (PV-PEM I) or without (PV-PEM II) power converters coupling both devices. In this paper, we analyze these concepts in terms of their techno-economic performance in order to determine the levelized cost of hydrogen (LCOH) for the target year 2025, based on different locations with different climate conditions. The analysis was carried out using a broadly applicable computer model based on an hourly resolved time-series of temperature and irradiance. The lowest LCOH was identified in the case of the CSP-SOE and CSP-PEM concepts with 14–17 €-ct per kW per h at high-irradiance locations, which clearly exceed the US Department of Energy (DOE) target of 6 $-ct per kW per h for the year 2020. Moreover, CSP-SOE also shows the highest hydrogen production volumes and, therefore, solar-to-hydrogen efficiencies. Considering the PV-PEM concepts, we found that the application of power converters for the electrical coupling of PV modules and electrolyzers does not contribute to cost reduction due to the higher related investment costs. A further system optimization is suggested regarding the implementation of short-term energy storage, which might be particularly relevant at locations with higher fluctuations in power supply.

  • Forschungszentrum Jülich
  • Central Library (ZB)
  • Powered by VuFind 6.1.1
Loading...