The Effect of Fuel Cell and Battery Size on Efficiency and Cell Lifetime for an L7e Fuel Cell Hybrid Vehicle

The size of the fuel cell and battery of a Fuel Cell Hybrid Electric Vehicle (FCHEV) will heavily affect the overall performance of the vehicle, its fuel economy, driveability, and the rates of fuel cell degradation observed. An undersized fuel cell may experience accelerated ageing of the fuel cell...

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Main Authors: Tom Fletcher, Kambiz Ebrahimi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-11-01
Series:Energies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/13/22/5889
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spelling doaj-e95f47282e8a4b618f940b71f255e1b82020-11-25T04:02:37ZengMDPI AGEnergies1996-10732020-11-01135889588910.3390/en13225889The Effect of Fuel Cell and Battery Size on Efficiency and Cell Lifetime for an L7e Fuel Cell Hybrid VehicleTom Fletcher0Kambiz Ebrahimi1School of Aeronautical and Automotive, Chemical and Materials Engineering (AACME), Loughborough University, LE11 3AP Loughborough, UKSchool of Aeronautical and Automotive, Chemical and Materials Engineering (AACME), Loughborough University, LE11 3AP Loughborough, UKThe size of the fuel cell and battery of a Fuel Cell Hybrid Electric Vehicle (FCHEV) will heavily affect the overall performance of the vehicle, its fuel economy, driveability, and the rates of fuel cell degradation observed. An undersized fuel cell may experience accelerated ageing of the fuel cell membrane and catalyst due to excessive heat and transient loading. This work describes a multi-objective design exploration exercise of fuel cell size and battery capacity comparing hydrogen fuel consumption, fuel cell lifetime, vehicle mass and running cost. For each system design considered, an individually optimised Energy Management Strategy (EMS) has been generated using Stochastic Dynamic Programming (SDP) in order to prevent bias to the results due to the control strategy. It has been found that the objectives of fuel efficiency, lifetime and running cost are largely complimentary, but degradation and running costs are much more sensitive to design changes than fuel efficiency and therefore should be included in any optimisation. Additionally, due to the expense of the fuel cell, combined with the dominating effect of start/stop cycling degradation, the optimal design from an overall running cost perspective is slightly downsized from one which is optimised purely for high efficiency.https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/13/22/5889fuel cell sizingStochastic Dynamic Programminghybrid vehiclehydrogen fuel cellfuel cell durabilityfuel cell cost reduction
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tom Fletcher
Kambiz Ebrahimi
spellingShingle Tom Fletcher
Kambiz Ebrahimi
The Effect of Fuel Cell and Battery Size on Efficiency and Cell Lifetime for an L7e Fuel Cell Hybrid Vehicle
Energies
fuel cell sizing
Stochastic Dynamic Programming
hybrid vehicle
hydrogen fuel cell
fuel cell durability
fuel cell cost reduction
author_facet Tom Fletcher
Kambiz Ebrahimi
author_sort Tom Fletcher
title The Effect of Fuel Cell and Battery Size on Efficiency and Cell Lifetime for an L7e Fuel Cell Hybrid Vehicle
title_short The Effect of Fuel Cell and Battery Size on Efficiency and Cell Lifetime for an L7e Fuel Cell Hybrid Vehicle
title_full The Effect of Fuel Cell and Battery Size on Efficiency and Cell Lifetime for an L7e Fuel Cell Hybrid Vehicle
title_fullStr The Effect of Fuel Cell and Battery Size on Efficiency and Cell Lifetime for an L7e Fuel Cell Hybrid Vehicle
title_full_unstemmed The Effect of Fuel Cell and Battery Size on Efficiency and Cell Lifetime for an L7e Fuel Cell Hybrid Vehicle
title_sort effect of fuel cell and battery size on efficiency and cell lifetime for an l7e fuel cell hybrid vehicle
publisher MDPI AG
series Energies
issn 1996-1073
publishDate 2020-11-01
description The size of the fuel cell and battery of a Fuel Cell Hybrid Electric Vehicle (FCHEV) will heavily affect the overall performance of the vehicle, its fuel economy, driveability, and the rates of fuel cell degradation observed. An undersized fuel cell may experience accelerated ageing of the fuel cell membrane and catalyst due to excessive heat and transient loading. This work describes a multi-objective design exploration exercise of fuel cell size and battery capacity comparing hydrogen fuel consumption, fuel cell lifetime, vehicle mass and running cost. For each system design considered, an individually optimised Energy Management Strategy (EMS) has been generated using Stochastic Dynamic Programming (SDP) in order to prevent bias to the results due to the control strategy. It has been found that the objectives of fuel efficiency, lifetime and running cost are largely complimentary, but degradation and running costs are much more sensitive to design changes than fuel efficiency and therefore should be included in any optimisation. Additionally, due to the expense of the fuel cell, combined with the dominating effect of start/stop cycling degradation, the optimal design from an overall running cost perspective is slightly downsized from one which is optimised purely for high efficiency.
topic fuel cell sizing
Stochastic Dynamic Programming
hybrid vehicle
hydrogen fuel cell
fuel cell durability
fuel cell cost reduction
url https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/13/22/5889
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