Title :
Adaptive control of a solid oxide fuel cell ultra-capacitor hybrid system
Author :
Das, T. ; Snyder, S.
Author_Institution :
Mech. Eng., Rochester Inst. of Technol., Rochester, NY, USA
fDate :
June 29 2011-July 1 2011
Abstract :
Solid oxide fuel cells (SOFCs) offer a number of advantages beyond those of most other fuel cells. However, like other fuel cells, rapid load following is difficult, and can lead to fuel starvation and consequently fuel cell damage. Mitigating fuel starvation and improving load following capabilities are conflicting control objectives. However, the issue can be addressed by the hybridization of the system with an energy storage device. A steady-state utilization property, combined with a current regulation strategy, is used to manage transient fuel utilization. Meanwhile, an overall system strategy is employed to manage energy sharing in the hybrid system for load following as well as for maintaining the state-of-charge of the energy storage device. This work presents an adaptive strategy which updates the controller based on current parameter estimates. The control design is validated on a hardware-in the-loop setup and experimental results are provided.
Keywords :
adaptive control; control system synthesis; solid oxide fuel cells; supercapacitors; SOFC; adaptive control; control design; energy storage device; fuel cell damage; fuel starvation; hardware-in-the-loop setup; hybridization; solid oxide fuel cell ultra-capacitor hybrid system; steady-state utilization property; Anodes; Current control; DC-DC power converters; Equations; Frequency selective surfaces; Fuel cells; Fuels;
Conference_Titel :
American Control Conference (ACC), 2011
Conference_Location :
San Francisco, CA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4577-0080-4
DOI :
10.1109/ACC.2011.5991519