Publication | Open Access
Integration of Wind Energy, Hydrogen and Natural Gas Pipeline Systems to Meet Community and Transportation Energy Needs: A Parametric Study
38
Citations
10
References
2014
Year
Natural Gas GridEnergy System DesignEngineeringHydrogen-based MicrogridsEnergy ConversionParametric StudyTransportation Energy NeedsAlternative Energy SolutionEnergy Systems EngineeringEnergy AnalysisWind TurbinesEnergy GenerationWind EnergyPower GenerationRenewable Energy SystemsWind Farm SizeGas Field DevelopmentEnergy ProductionWind FarmsPotential BenefitsSustainable EnergyEnergy Planning
The potential benefits are examined of the “Power-to-Gas” (P2G) scheme to utilize excess wind power capacity by generating hydrogen (or potentially methane) for use in the natural gas distribution grid. A parametric analysis is used to determine the feasibility and size of systems producing hydrogen that would be injected into the natural gas grid. Specifically, wind farms located in southwestern Ontario, Canada are considered. Infrastructure requirements, wind farm size, pipeline capacity, geographical dispersion, hydrogen production rate, capital and operating costs are used as performance measures. The model takes into account the potential production rate of hydrogen and the rate that it can be injected into the local gas grid. “Straw man” systems are examined, centered on a wind farm size of 100 MW integrating a 16-MW capacity electrolysis system typically producing 4700 kg of hydrogen per day.
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