Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1283245 International Journal of Hydrogen Energy 2009 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

This paper describes the general architecture of a hybrid energy system, whose main components are a proton exchange membrane fuel cell, a battery pack and an ultracapacitor pack as power sources, and metal hydride canisters as energy storage devices, suitable for supplying power to small mobile non-automotive devices in a flexible and variable way. The first experimental results carried out on a system prototype are described, showing that the extra components, required in order to manage the hybrid system, do not remarkably affect the overall system efficiency, which is always higher than 36% in all the test configurations examined. In fact, the system allows the fuel cell to work most often at quasi-optimal conditions, near its maximum efficiency (i.e. at low/medium loads), because high external loads are met by the combined effort of the fuel cell and the ultracapacitors. For the same reason, the metal hydride storage system can be used also under highly dynamic operating conditions, notwithstanding its usually poor kinetic performance.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Electrochemistry
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