Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7729842 | Journal of Power Sources | 2016 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
This paper presents operating and performance characteristics of a nine-stack solid-oxide fuel cell combined-heat-and-power system. Integrated with a natural-gas fuel processor, air compressor, reactant-gas preheater, and diagnostics and control equipment, the system is designed for use in unconventional oil-and-gas processing. Termed a “Geothermic Fuel Cell” (GFC), the heat liberated by the fuel cell during electricity generation is harnessed to process oil shale into high-quality crude oil and natural gas. The 1.5-kWe SOFC stacks are packaged within three-stack GFC modules. Three GFC modules are mechanically and electrically coupled to a reactant-gas preheater and installed within the earth. During operation, significant heat is conducted from the Geothermic Fuel Cell to the surrounding geology. The complete system was continuously operated on hydrogen and natural-gas fuels for â¼600Â h. A quasi-steady operating point was established to favor heat generation (29.1Â kWth) over electricity production (4.4Â kWe). Thermodynamic analysis reveals a combined-heat-and-power efficiency of 55% at this condition. Heat flux to the geology averaged 3.2Â kWÂ mâ1 across the 9-m length of the Geothermic Fuel Cell-preheater assembly. System performance is reviewed; some suggestions for improvement are proposed.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Electrochemistry
Authors
Neal Sullivan, Gladys Anyenya, Buddy Haun, Mark Daubenspeck, Joseph Bonadies, Rick Kerr, Bernhard Fischer, Adam Wright, Gerald Jones, Robert Li, Mark Wall, Alan Forbes, Marshall Savage,