DocumentCode :
149237
Title :
Short and long term energy storage for enhanced resilience of electric infrastructures storage of compressed hydrogen and oxygen gasses derived from electrolysis to provide grid connected mechanical and electrochemical electrical power generation on deman
Author :
Grant, Dennis Charles
Author_Institution :
Center for Inf. Assurance & Cybersecurity, Univ. of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA
fYear :
2014
fDate :
25-27 March 2014
Firstpage :
1
Lastpage :
6
Abstract :
Energy storage based upon converting electricity from water to hydrogen gas provides a solution to the problem of intermittency in renewable energy systems. These benefits are not specific to isolated solar and wind energy production but can also be derived as a complement to load and demand variations on the fully integrated electrical grid. The main components of this system are electrolytic cells, which use electricity to generate hydrogen and oxygen from water, compressed gas hydrogen and oxygen storage tanks and fuel cells, which recombine hydrogen with oxygen to generate electricity. At times of excess energy availability, electrolytic cells are used as a controllable load by which the excess energy is converted into hydrogen and oxygen gas. When there is insufficient energy to meet demands, the fuel cell is used to recombine hydrogen and oxygen into water and create electricity. Water storage and compressed gasses can be used to further tune the load. Water can be pumped from one reservoir to another to create artificial demand, and can be allowed to flow by gravitational power to create electricity on demand. Compressed gasses can similarly be managed to create load or increase generation capacity at will. These complements are key to effectively managing electrolytic cell arrays for maximum potential, but also provide for very high versatility and resilience of the system, which can allow operators to micro-manage electrical supplies and demands. This work examines the technical details of such systems and extracts some of the lessons learned from more than fifty years of related research, prototyping and implementations.
Keywords :
compressed air energy storage; electrolysis; hydrogen storage; compressed hydrogen; electric infrastructures storage; electrochemical electrical power generation on demand; electrolysis; electrolytic cells; grid connected mechanical electrical power generation on demand; long term energy storage; oxygen gas; renewable energy systems; short term energy storage; Economics; Electrochemical processes; Fuel cells; Hydrogen; Metals; Production; electrolysis; energy storage; fuel cell; hydrogen;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Renewable Energy Congress (IREC), 2014 5th International
Conference_Location :
Hammamet
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4799-2196-6
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/IREC.2014.6826953
Filename :
6826953
Link To Document :
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