Design, Operation, Control, and Economics of a Photovoltaic/Fuel Cell/Battery Hybrid Renewable Energy System for Automotive Applications

Author(s)Whiteman, Zachary S.
Author(s)Bubna, Piyush
Author(s)Prasad, Ajay K.
Author(s)Ogunnaike, Babatunde A.
Ordered AuthorZachary S. Whiteman, Piyush Bubna, Ajay K. Prasad and Babatunde A. Ogunnaike
UD AuthorWhiteman, Zachary S.en_US
UD AuthorBubna, Piyushen_US
UD AuthorPrasad, Ajay K.en_US
UD AuthorOgunnaike, Babatunde A.en_US
Date Accessioned2016-04-25T15:03:54Z
Date Available2016-04-25T15:03:54Z
Copyright DateCopyright © 2015 by the authors.en_US
Publication Date2015-06-09
DescriptionPublisher's PDF.en_US
AbstractMeeting rapidly growing global energy demand—without producing greenhouse gases or further diminishing the availability of non-renewable resources—requires the development of affordable low-emission renewable energy systems. Here, we develop a hybrid renewable energy system (HRES) for automotive applications—specifically, a roof-installed photovoltaic (PV) array combined with a PEM fuel cell/NiCd battery bus currently operating shuttle routes on the University of Delaware campus. The system’s overall operating objectives—meeting the total power demand of the bus and maintaining the desired state of charge (SOC) of the NiCd battery—are achieved with appropriately designed controllers: a logic-based “algebraic controller” and a standard PI controller. The design, implementation, and performance of the hybrid system are demonstrated via simulation of real shuttle runs under various operating conditions. The results show that both control strategies perform equally well in enabling the HRES to meet its objectives under typical operating conditions, and under sudden cloud cover conditions; however, at consistently high bus speeds, battery SOC maintenance is better, and the system consumes less hydrogen, with PI control. An economic analysis of the PV investment necessary to realize the HRES design objectives indicates a return on investment of approximately 30% (a slight, but nonetheless positive, ~$550 profit over the bus lifetime) in Newark, DE, establishing the economic viability of the proposed addition of a PV array to the existing University of Delaware fuel cell/battery bus.en_US
DepartmentUniversity of Delaware. Department of Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering.en_US
DepartmentUniversity of Delaware. Department of Mechanical Engineering.en_US
CitationWhiteman, Zachary S., et al. "Design, Operation, Control, and Economics of a Photovoltaic/Fuel Cell/Battery Hybrid Renewable Energy System for Automotive Applications." Processes 3.2 (2015): 452-470.en_US
DOI10.3390/pr3020452en_US
ISSN2227-9717en_US
URLhttp://udspace.udel.edu/handle/19716/17678
Languageen_USen_US
PublisherMDPI AGen_US
dc.rightsCC-BY 4.0en_US
dc.sourceprocessesen_US
dc.source.urihttp://www.mdpi.com/journal/processesen_US
TitleDesign, Operation, Control, and Economics of a Photovoltaic/Fuel Cell/Battery Hybrid Renewable Energy System for Automotive Applicationsen_US
TypeArticleen_US
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