Dual-objective optimization of solar driven alkaline electrolyzer system for on-site hydrogen production and storage: Current and future scenarios
H. Tebibel
Renewable Energy, 2024, vol. 237, issue PC
Abstract:
Achieving cost competitiveness of renewable hydrogen could accelerate the transition to the deeply decarbonized energy system. In this article, we develop and apply a dual-objective optimization model to explore the photovoltaic (PV) hydrogen production pathway and costs development from the present through 2050. The model is applied for optimal capacity allocation of the megawatt-scale off-grid PV-Hydrogen system to achieve maximum production at the minimal levelized cost of hydrogen (LCOH). Methodology includes a smoothing control strategy. Simulation is performed utilizing measured meteorological data for one year with hourly resolution and considering electrolyzer's load flexibility constraint. It has been found that the smoothing control strategy is indispensable for maximizing PV energy utilization, enhancing the electrolyzer's capacity factor and reducing the power curtailments. The analysis shows that the off-grid solar hydrogen in Algeria lacks economic competitiveness currently. Components CAPEX reduction turns out to be the fundamental condition towards the future LCOH decrease. LCOH could decline from 4.2 $/kg in 2025 to 2.24 $/kg in 2050 under central assumptions and to roughly 1.4 $/kg under optimistic assumptions. Alkaline electrolysis step cost could reduce by 0.28 $/kg every decade. Hydrogen storage autonomy could rise the LCOH by 7.1 c$ per day of autonomy in 2050.
Keywords: Off-grid photovoltaic hydrogen production; Dual-objective optimization; Multi-megawatt-scale alkaline electrolyzer; Smoothing control strategy; Levelized cost of hydrogen projection up to 2050 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2024
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:eee:renene:v:237:y:2024:i:pc:s0960148124018524
DOI: 10.1016/j.renene.2024.121784
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