July-August 2009

Breaking New Ground

Innovative fuel cell projects forge ahead.

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Photo: St. Helena Hospital St. Helena Hospital (St. Helena, CA) is remotely situated in the perfect site location for Distributed Energy installations.

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By Ed Ritchie

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For an operating schedule, the fuel cells will contribute power 20 hours per day to the campus grid, with the remaining four hours used to charge the storage system. The incentives are based upon the storage system delivering a minimum of four hours of continuous power.

“We’re doing a technology review and compressed air was an option, but the storage vessels are required to have wall thickness of about half an inch for a chamber that will hold compressed air at 1200 PSI,” he says. “So it becomes costly to build a pressure vessel large enough. My guess is, it will probably be some sort of a battery such as sodium sulfide, or something of that nature.”

Along with the four-hour discharge, the storage system must demonstrate reliable service of at least five years. Advanced batteries or flywheels could be an option, though Dilliott notes that such capability has been a technology barrier in the past.

Photo: Idatech
The objective of IdaTech’s program is to generate electricity using an advanced fuel  cell system compatible with military logistics fuels.
Further innovation is planned for the area of storing energy in a direct current (DC) form and using it without converting it to
alternating current (AC). Plans include building an energy research park around the fuel cell so one part will be storage, and the other part will be direct DC use in a datacenter for computers using DC.

“That way we would maximize the efficiency and skip the inverter,” explains Dilliott. “Also, we might convert some of the biogas to try hydrogen, to supply fuel to campus vehicles.”

According to Byron Washom, the new director of strategic energy initiatives at UCSD, carbon neutrality is driving much of the innovation required for success with such projects. He believes that universities have an advantage in advancing new power technologies such as the fuel cell power storage project, because they typically have microgrids and can implement distributed energy solutions with less complications and more benefits than institutions relying completely on utility power.

Among those benefits is an increased level of involvement by the student body, notes Maggie Souder, the university’s sustainability coordinator.

“UCSD has been very innovative, and such projects as the fuel cell are more than just a test bed for climate change,” says Souder. “We’re thrilled, because it engages students and the general population to the things that it takes to make climate change happen.

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“The fuel cell is just one really fabulous example of something we can show and make a difference on a larger scale, that goes beyond maximizing our recycling and putting photovoltaics on our buildings,” she adds. “We see this as sort of a next step, and we coined the phrase sustainability 2.0 and were picking the low-hanging fruit.”

No Hydrogen Access for the Army
Our final example of innovative fuel cell projects comes from IdaTech, a Bend, OR-based fuel cell provider, working in the critical area of alternative fuel sources, such as methanol, diesel, and jet fuel. The company recently completed a successful trial of a 3-kW Tactical Fuel Cell Generator (TFCG) developed for the US Army and designed to operate on military fuels such as JP-8, Jet A, and diesel (DF2) distillates. Next Page >

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