Title :
A modular fuel cell with hybrid energy storage
Author :
Hawke, J. ; Enjeti, P. ; Palma, L. ; Sarma, H.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Texas A & M Univ., College Station, TX, USA
Abstract :
A modular fuel cell system has many advantages: (a.) it is fault tolerant under fuel cell and/or converter fault conditions, (b.) it is capable of supplying partial load power if one or more of the one stack section is damaged, and (c.) it distributes heat more evenly throughout the cell while maximizing the power delivered from each stack section. By introducing modular dc-dc converter interfacing with high-power energy storage devices, a fuel cell system can be tailored to provide time sustainable responses to sudden high power load demands. A design example is presented, where a dc-dc converter interfaces a 1-kW, three-section fuel cell stack with a supercapacitor/lithium-ion hybrid energy storage bank. Three different current-boosting arrangements are considered: (i.) a supercapacitor bank, (ii.) a lithium-ion bank, and (iii.) a hybrid bank. The current-boosting time sustainability of these modular fuel cell systems with hybrid energy storage is analyzed.
Keywords :
DC-DC power convertors; fault tolerance; fuel cells; secondary cells; supercapacitors; Li; current-boosting arrangements; fault tolerant; hybrid energy storage; lithium-ion bank; modular dc-dc converter; modular fuel cell; partial load power; power 1 kW; power load; stack section; supercapacitor bank; three-section fuel cell stack; Batteries; Decision support systems; Fault tolerant systems; Fuel cells; Heating; Supercapacitors; Fuel cells; bi-directional converters; hybrid energy systems; lithium-ion batteries; modular fuel cell systems; supercapacitors;
Conference_Titel :
Energy Conversion Congress and Exposition (ECCE), 2011 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Phoenix, AZ
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4577-0542-7
DOI :
10.1109/ECCE.2011.6064169