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ã ã ã 2001 Rolls-Royce plc The information in this document is the property of Rolls-Royce plc and may not be copied or communicated to a third party, or used for any purpose other than that for which it is supplied without the express written consent of Rolls-Royce plc. Whilst this information is given in good faith based upon the latest information available to Rolls-Royce plc, no warranty or representation is given concerning such information, which must not be taken as establishing any contractual or other commitment binding upon Rolls-Royce plc or any of its subsidiary or associated companies. Fuel cell gas turbine hybrids – a key part of a clean future The Rolls-Royce development programme for pressurised hybrid fuel cell systems Robert Cunningham Fuel Cells Group

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���� 2001 Rolls-Royce plcThe information in this document is the property of Rolls-Royce plc and may not be copied or communicated to a third party,or used for any purpose other than that for which it is supplied without the express written consent of Rolls-Royce plc.

Whilst this information is given in good faith based upon the latest information available to Rolls-Royce plc, no warranty orrepresentation is given concerning such information, which must not be taken as establishing any contractual or othercommitment binding upon Rolls-Royce plc or any of its subsidiary or associated companies.

Fuel cell gas turbine hybrids – akey part of a clean futureThe Rolls-Royce development programmefor pressurised hybrid fuel cell systemsRobert Cunningham – Fuel Cells Group

H2net RAL Sep01 2

Team

GD Agnew1, CN Berns1, SA Ali2, RR Moritz2, P Butler1, E Dean1

C Burrows1, RD Collins1, RH Cunningham1, N Hart1, MJ Oakley1,M Pashley1, N Lapeña-Rey1, R Scholes1, O Tarnowski1,D Wastie1, R Woodburn1 , G Wright1

� Rolls-Royce Strategic Research Centre, Derby, UK� Rolls-Royce, Indianapolis, USA

H2net RAL Sep01 3

Overview

The Rolls-Royce vision of pressurised hybrids� Pressurised hybrids� Reducing $/kW for SOFC in general� Benefits of pressurised operation at high temperature� Comparison of atmospheric and pressurised systems

Progress towards the vision� System and turbogenerator development� Stack module development� Internal reforming

H2net RAL Sep01 4

High temperature fuel cell hybrids� Air side of fuel cell enclosed in gas

turbine– Fuel cell at pressure but separate

flow� Recuperator (Heat exchanger)

allows air in to be heated by air out� Heat from fuel cell provides

compression for free� High efficiency (60-70%)

– Supports capital cost differencefrom conventional plant (GTs etc)

Simple pressurised SOFC/GT hybridshowing air side flows only

OUT

IN

PowerElectronicsSOFC

Recuperator(HX)

AlternatorAir in Exhaust

H2net RAL Sep01 5

Two ways to reduce $/kW

Reduce $� Improve system integration

– Purpose-designed andintegrated components can bespec’d to suit fuel cell

� Early fuel cell demonstratorshave used process industryplant

– General purpose componentsare over-spec’d for specific fuelcell application

� Reduce stack size and weight– Reduces overall system size,

weight and cost

Increase kW� Increase stack efficiency� Increase stack power

– Increasing cell current densityrequires greater flows

– Increased current also incursgreater I2R losses andreduces efficiency

� Increase system power andefficiency

– Pressurised hybrid has higherpower and efficiency than rawstack

H2net RAL Sep01 6

Cost reduction with SOFC systems in general� SOFC can use cheap electrode

materials– High temperature chemistry has

fast kinetics� Anode exhaust provides water

for reforming– No need for elaborate water

management/humidification� Easy to use heat output from

stack– 800+°C difference with ambient

makes thermal managementsimple

� Hard to poison high temp stack– System simplified – no need to

backup fuel processingcomponents

– Thrives on CO– Happy with CO2, NH3

� Simple fuel processing -Internal reforming benefits

– No need for water gas shiftreactors or selective oxidiser

– Close integration of fuelprocessing cuts cost

– Internal reforming providessignificant portion of stackcooling

� Affordable fuel flexibility– Can accommodate wide range

of CO / H2 mixtures

H2net RAL Sep01 7

Pressurised and atmospheric compared

� Identical stack in pressurisedand atmospheric configurations

– Near term SOFC stack– Underlying stack efficiency 50%– System efficiency exceeds

stack efficiency for pressurisedcase

� $/kW better by 680/1050 = 0.65at pressure if $ cost identical

– Atmospheric recuperator mustbe exotic material

– Pressurised recuperator can bestainless steel

576871Recuperator

hot inlettemp °C

1051684Net powerkW

67%44%EfficiencyNet AC LHV

Press’dAtm

H2net RAL Sep01 8

Turbomachinery cheaper than heat exchanger

� Incoming flows can beheated by

– Heat exchanger– Compression in

turbomachinery� Fuel cell exhaust can be

brought down in temperatureby

– Heat exchanger– Expansion in turbine

� Heat exchange is lowvelocity process (m/s)

– Large amounts of metal perunit massflow

� Turbomachinery uses highvelocities (300+m/s)

– Very small amounts of metalper unit massflow

– Lower cost than heatexchange especially for hightemperatures

– Materials used in turbinesare unaffordable in heatexchanger quantities

� Turbocharging of fuel cellprovides blower function

– Work for compressor comesfrom fuel cell waste heat

H2net RAL Sep01 9

Progress towards the vision

H2net RAL Sep01 10

System and turbogenerator development

� EU IM-SOFC-GT project– Integrated modelling– Concept definition– Started Feb 2001

� Specialised turbomachineryconcept development beingpursued at Indianapolis

– Oil-free turbogeneratorconcepts

– Interim results from USDOE funded hybrid turbinedevelopment reported inASME Turbo 2001†

Two-stageaxial turbineMagnetic

radialbearing

High speedDirect drivealternator

Aeroderivativeradial

compressor

MagneticThrust bearing

† S.A. Ali and R.R Moritz, A Turbogenerator for Fuel Cell/Gas Turbine Hybrid Power Plant

Novel oil-free turbogenerator conceptfrom DOE hybrid turbine programme

H2net RAL Sep01 11

� RR established IP-SOFC stackprogramme 9 years ago

– World leading stack concept– Strong on manufacturing cost

� Focus now on stacks and systems– Optimise for overall performance– Results are for stacks

– Not just cells� Leading EU programmes

– MF-SOFC– Stack development

– IM-SOFC-GT– Integrated modeling and concept

design of hybrids� Participating in EU programme

– CORE– Component Reliability

IP-SOFC stack modules

Integrated Planar SOFC (IP-SOFC)

SingleIP-SOFC

cell

H2net RAL Sep01 12

1 kW class stack operated in August 2000

H2net RAL Sep01 13

1 kW stack on test at Derby (August 2000)

� 828W output achieved on 97% hydrogen� Total power from individual elements operated individually 960W

H2net RAL Sep01 14

European Union MF-SOFC project

� Stack development to 20kW� Atmospheric demonstration� Largest SOFC stack

development programme in EUFramework 5

– €9M gross funding to 2003

� Partners:RisøGaz de FranceImperial CollegeACLUK DTI support

� DG Research– Gilles Lequeux

� 5th Framework Programme� Energy, environment and

sustainable development

� Only short selection ofinterim results presentedhere focussing onRolls-Royce contribution

H2net RAL Sep01 15

Revised stack design� Addresses issues raised in 1kW

stack� Uses novel Rolls-Royce concept for

a pressurised stack� Thin tubes

– x3 on kW/litre – improves systemcost significantly

– Improved heat and mass transfer� New manifolding design based on

bundles– Much improved compliance and

potential leakage– Improved flexibility on internal

reforming– x10 reduction in manifolding 40 cell modules (new design)

H2net RAL Sep01 16

Improved mass transfer

� No mass transfer tail-off seen– Down to limiting 0.5V– With dilute H2 and low flows

� Analysis indicates 75% utilisation achieved in correspondinganode recirculation scheme down to current under 300mA/cm2

Effect of Flowrate 40% H2 60% N2 3% H2O

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

0 1 2 3 4 5

Module Current /A

Mod

ule

Volta

ge /V

2 N l /min

3 N l /min

4 N l /min

5 N l /min

Effect of Flowrate 40% H2 60% CO2 3% H2O

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

0 1 2 3 4

Module Current /A

Mod

ule

Volta

ge /V

2 N l /min

3 N l /min

4 N l /min

5 N l /min

Results shown for short 14 cell modules with7 cells in series at 900°C (June ’01)

H2net RAL Sep01 17

Successful operation on methane

� DTI internal reformingproject

� Reformer based on flat tubein flow-series with short MF-SOFC module

� Module run on methanemixture corresponding tooperation with re-circulatinganode stream

14 cell short module with internalreforming unit (behind)

H2net RAL Sep01 18

Conclusions 1

� Pressurised fuel cell hybrid costs benefit directly andindirectly from pressurisation

� $/kW potential for hybrids exceeds that of atmospheric units– Cost of GT and pressure vessel paid for by other savings

� Pressurised hybrids have greater potential to exploit benefitsof mature fuel cell technology

– Can fully exploit increases in power density (kW/litre) to reduceoverall system cost

H2net RAL Sep01 19

Conclusions 2� World-class results from Rolls-Royce stack development

programme– 1kW stack operation– Operation of new Rolls-Royce stack design– 300W/litre at $300/kW (100MW pa)– At intended operating current:

– 75% fuel utilisation– Under 2%/1000hrs degradation

– Operation on methane mixture� Funding from the following sources is gratefully

acknowledged– European Union– US Department Of Energy– UK Department of Trade and Industry