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73 comments on Ammonia Fuel Network Conference - 2008
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73 comments on Ammonia Fuel Network Conference - 2008
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GAIA Host Collective
My interest in alternative fuels is for telecom - not only my area of personal expertise but a necessary infrastructure asset in a post-oil world. A fuel cell at the right price point can replace backup generators today, but ammonia could potentially just run the ICE generator as well.
For these standby applications, maintenance is a significant issue, so a long-lived, high-reliability fuel cell would offer many advantages over ICE generators. With subsidies even hydrogen fuel cells come close to break-even, according to those doing trials. I need to look at cost numbers (fuel, engine/fuel cell, maintenance, support, etc.) for NH3 and better understand pros and cons.
A low-cost reversible process would permit a new set of applications that cannot be cost effectively addressed by batteries today. Peak shaving with off-peak charging would be the initial goal, followed by local charging with sporadic wind and solar. Flow batteries are the best option I've come up with so far, and I'm looking at costs for the vanadium solution now.
I'm 100% behind adding NH3 to the option list for wind storage -- that's going to be a critical need. Cost is important, but any process than can readily deal with the sporadic nature of wind can tolerate some added cost -- peak-ready loads are valuable just like on-demand generation in flattening out the supply/demand curves.
The large vanadium redox battery housed in a shed in King Island Australia seems to be a disappointment. The wind power system still requires frequent diesel backup as the battery merely buffers the output for a couple of hours. If a tungsten (scheelite) mine re-opens on the island it will be powered by an underwater alternating current cable fed from the State grid. They are also looking at seafloor mounted water turbines.
There seem to be some unpleasant intellectual property issues with vanadium, else surely more than a handful of companies directly tied to the original invention would be producing units?
On the one hand, I've seen low vanadium electrolyte costs estimated for large volumes, like $50 to $150 per kwh of capacity. On the other hand, I hear of very high system costs, and limited storage. For the example you state, it would seem to be a simple and cost-effective matter to just add a lot more vanadium flow storage, yet that seems not to be considered.
Volumes of scale and process refinement could likely help, but that requires some outside money and intellectual property access.
Here are vendor-stated costs for the vanadium battery:
Unfortunately, they say this is a "target" based on volume manufacturing and a 2x sale-price mark-up. I don't know of many companies that survive on 2x for relatively high-tech products while supporting an engineering wing, so those numbers are probably a long time coming.
Note that time honoured lead-acid starter batteries for cars work out about $200 per kwh, albeit shallow draw and clunky. But no pumps, easy recycling.
The addition of capacitors to standard lead acid batteries together with some over-capacity transforms the lifespan of lead acid, as it is deep discharge which damages them:
http://alfin2100.blogspot.com/2008/01/ultracapacitor-battery-hybrid-elec...
Hi--
Fuel cells powered by ammonia are already being marketed in Europe by Diverse Energy Ltd for telecom and small diesel back-up applications. http://diverse-energy.com/who.html
These appear to be PEM type hydrogen fuel cells where the hydrogen is stored in the form of ammonia (or propane or hydrogen), and then cracked to hydrogen and nitrogen and purified for feed to the PEM fuel cell.
It is not clear at this point how the company generates the ammonia (i.e. wind, solar, or grid), but likely it is purchased merchant ammonia for now.
AFN
Thanks for the link.
Sounds complex, but a liquid fuel is sure a lot more palatable than gaseous. It will be interesting to compare full TCO for hydrogen vs ammonia or propane.