Generation of H2 on Board Lng Vessels for Consumption in the Propulsion System

At present, LNG vessels without reliquefaction plants consume the BOG (boil-off gas) in their engines and the excess is burned in the gas combustion unit without recovering any of its energy content. Excess BOG energy could be captured to produce H2, a fuel with high energy density and zero emission...

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Main Authors: Fernández Ignacio Arias, Gómez Manuel Romero, Gómez Javier Romero, López-González Luis M.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2020-03-01
Series:Polish Maritime Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/pomr-2020-0009
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spelling doaj-8a5071f773fc4b1a9c54354b03d0058d2021-09-05T14:01:08ZengSciendoPolish Maritime Research2083-74292020-03-01271839510.2478/pomr-2020-0009pomr-2020-0009Generation of H2 on Board Lng Vessels for Consumption in the Propulsion SystemFernández Ignacio Arias0Gómez Manuel Romero1Gómez Javier Romero2López-González Luis M.3University of A Coruña – Energy Engineering Research Group – School of Nautical Science and Marine Engineering, SpainUniversity of A Coruña – Energy Engineering Research Group – School of Nautical Science and Marine Engineering, SpainUniversity of A Coruña – Energy Engineering Research Group – School of Nautical Science and Marine Engineering, SpainDepartment of Mechanical Engineering, University of La Rioja, SpainAt present, LNG vessels without reliquefaction plants consume the BOG (boil-off gas) in their engines and the excess is burned in the gas combustion unit without recovering any of its energy content. Excess BOG energy could be captured to produce H2, a fuel with high energy density and zero emissions, through the installation of a reforming plant. Such H2 production would, in turn, require on-board storage for its subsequent consumption in the propulsion plant when navigating in areas with stringent anti-pollution regulations, thus reducing CO2 and SOX emissions. This paper presents a review of the different H2 storage systems and the methods of burning it in propulsion engines, to demonstrate the energetic viability thereof on board LNG vessels. Following the analysis, it is identified that a pressurised and cooled H2 storage system is the best suited to an LNG vessel due to its simplicity and the fact that it does not pose a safety hazard. There are a number of methods for consuming the H2 generated in the DF engines that comprise the propulsion plant, but the use of a mixture of 70% CH4-30% H2 is the most suitable as it does not require any modifications to the injection system. Installation of an on-board reforming plant and H2 storage system generates sufficient H2 to allow for almost 3 days’ autonomy with a mixture of 70%CH4-30%H2. This reduces the engine consumption of CH4 by 11.38%, thus demonstrating that the system is not only energy-efficient, but lends greater versatility to the vessel.https://doi.org/10.2478/pomr-2020-0009boil-off gasefficiencyh2 storagelng vesselreforming
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Fernández Ignacio Arias
Gómez Manuel Romero
Gómez Javier Romero
López-González Luis M.
spellingShingle Fernández Ignacio Arias
Gómez Manuel Romero
Gómez Javier Romero
López-González Luis M.
Generation of H2 on Board Lng Vessels for Consumption in the Propulsion System
Polish Maritime Research
boil-off gas
efficiency
h2 storage
lng vessel
reforming
author_facet Fernández Ignacio Arias
Gómez Manuel Romero
Gómez Javier Romero
López-González Luis M.
author_sort Fernández Ignacio Arias
title Generation of H2 on Board Lng Vessels for Consumption in the Propulsion System
title_short Generation of H2 on Board Lng Vessels for Consumption in the Propulsion System
title_full Generation of H2 on Board Lng Vessels for Consumption in the Propulsion System
title_fullStr Generation of H2 on Board Lng Vessels for Consumption in the Propulsion System
title_full_unstemmed Generation of H2 on Board Lng Vessels for Consumption in the Propulsion System
title_sort generation of h2 on board lng vessels for consumption in the propulsion system
publisher Sciendo
series Polish Maritime Research
issn 2083-7429
publishDate 2020-03-01
description At present, LNG vessels without reliquefaction plants consume the BOG (boil-off gas) in their engines and the excess is burned in the gas combustion unit without recovering any of its energy content. Excess BOG energy could be captured to produce H2, a fuel with high energy density and zero emissions, through the installation of a reforming plant. Such H2 production would, in turn, require on-board storage for its subsequent consumption in the propulsion plant when navigating in areas with stringent anti-pollution regulations, thus reducing CO2 and SOX emissions. This paper presents a review of the different H2 storage systems and the methods of burning it in propulsion engines, to demonstrate the energetic viability thereof on board LNG vessels. Following the analysis, it is identified that a pressurised and cooled H2 storage system is the best suited to an LNG vessel due to its simplicity and the fact that it does not pose a safety hazard. There are a number of methods for consuming the H2 generated in the DF engines that comprise the propulsion plant, but the use of a mixture of 70% CH4-30% H2 is the most suitable as it does not require any modifications to the injection system. Installation of an on-board reforming plant and H2 storage system generates sufficient H2 to allow for almost 3 days’ autonomy with a mixture of 70%CH4-30%H2. This reduces the engine consumption of CH4 by 11.38%, thus demonstrating that the system is not only energy-efficient, but lends greater versatility to the vessel.
topic boil-off gas
efficiency
h2 storage
lng vessel
reforming
url https://doi.org/10.2478/pomr-2020-0009
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