Title: ENERGYCONVERSION OPTIONS FOR ENERGYEFFICIENT CEA EMPHASIS ON FUEL CELLS
1ENERGY-CONVERSION OPTIONS FOR ENERGY-EFFICIENT
CEA- EMPHASIS ON FUEL CELLS -
- Norman R. Scott
- and
- Corinne J. Rutzke
- Cornell University, Ithaca, NY
2Agricultural Importance
- Agriculture as a source for food, natural raw
materials for bioindustries and energy will
increasingly be a major engine to drive our
transition to a sustainable world.
3AGRICULTURE TODAY
- Combination of family-owned and corporation-owned
enterprises - Located away from population centers
- Products are transported to processing centers
located near interstate trucking transportation
lines
4THE FUTURE OF AGRICULTURE
- Integrated, sustainable systems
- Agricultural production systems that are
- energy suppliers and
- economic drivers for the surrounding community
- Located near or in population centers
5PUTTING THE PIECES TOGETHER
6INNOVATIONS ARE DRIVEN BY
- Environmental concerns
- Distributed electric generation
- Sustainable communities
- Entrepreneurship opportunities
- National policy
7Future Benefits Conclusions
Dairy Farm
Input
Output
Dairy Operation
Water
Milk
Absorption Chiller/
milk
Plate Heat
Refrigerator
Exchanger
M
fish
Algal
Fish
a
Supple-
Lagoon
Cow
Pond
Tanks
r
mentals
veggies
k
Greenhouse
Screw
e
compost
Compost
Separator
Sun
t
s
Raw Manure
Digester
Pretreatment
On farm
Cropland
H
S
2
Electric Grid
Scrubber
Irrigation
G R I D
System
electricity
Fuel Cell/
Inverter
Cogeneration
Heating
CO
2
Electrical Storage
System
Separator
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9ENERGY CONVERTERS
- Diesel engine
- Microturbines
- Fuel cells
10WHAT IS A FUEL CELL?
- an electrochemical energy conversion device
- converts hydrogen and oxygen into water,
producing electricity and heat in the process - can be recharged (using hydrogen and oxygen)
- provides a DC (direct current) voltage
- can be used to power motors, lights or electrical
appliances - several different types of fuel cells, each using
a different chemistry - usually classified (named) by the type of
electrolyte used
11HOW DOES A FUEL CELL WORK?
- Chemistry of a Fuel Cell
- Anode side
- 2H2 gt 4H 4e-
- Cathode side
- O2 4H 4e- gt 2H2O
- Net reaction
- 2H2 O2 gt 2H2O
12HOW DOES A FUEL CELL WORK?
membrane with catalyst
anode
cathode
13HOW DOES A FUEL CELL WORK?
14HOW DOES A FUEL CELL WORK?
15HOW DOES A FUEL CELL WORK?
e-
e-
pressurized hydrogen gas
Membrane allows H to cross, and prevents e-
from crossing
16HOW DOES A FUEL CELL WORK?
cathode
membrane
anode
catalyst
O
e-
e-
pressurized hydrogen gas
Electrons are attracted to cathode and current is
generated
17HOW DOES A FUEL CELL WORK?
H2O
...and water is formed
18FUEL CELL STACK
19HOW DOES A FUEL CELL WORK?
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21CHALLENGES WITH FUEL CELLS
- Production of/access to clean hydrogen fuel
- Reduction of H2S contamination
- Storage and distribution of hydrogen
- Hydrogen gas contains little energy per unit
volume (compared to a liquid fuel like gasoline
or methanol). - A device called a reformer turns hydrocarbon or
alcohol fuels into hydrogen - Reformers are not perfect
- generate heat and produce other gases besides
hydrogen. - the hydrogen that comes out of them is not pure
- lowers the efficiency of the fuel cell.
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23FUELCELL ENERGYS 250 kW DIRECT FUEL CELL POWER
PLANT
24200 kW UTC POWER PLANT IN CENTRAL PARK, NEW YORK
CITY
25UTC FUEL CELLS TIMES SQUARE INSTALLATION, NEW
YORK CITY
26IS IT ECONOMICALLY FEASIBLE TO USE FUEL CELLS
FOR PROTECTED HORTICULTURE ENERGY NEEDS?
27ENERGY USE AT TWO NEW YORK STATE GREENHOUSES
- Cornell CEA Greenhouse
- lettuce production facility
- (CEA Commercial
- Demonstration Project)
Underwood Farms Shushan, New York Family-owned
hydroponic tomato greenhouse
28Cornell CEA Demonstration GH ENERGY USE
EQUIPMENT LIST
Office Environmental controls computer,
business computer, printer, alarm system, office
light, answering machine Restroom Overhead light
and fan Walk-in cooler Air chiller and
lights Headhouse Overhead lights, freezer,
radio, coffee maker,
microwave, vacuum seeder, seeder light, EC and
pH meters, electronic scale, O2
switch valve Growth room Water-cooled lamps,
chiller, fan, compressor, Air conditioner,
timers, pumps, CO2 meter Furnace room Overhead
lights, boilers (headhouse, pond
pump, main circulation pumps, boiler
pump) exhaust fan, hot
water heater Greenhouse Pond pumps, overhead
fans, HPS lamps, Walkway
lamps, exhaust fans, shade motor, vent motor,
pad pump, water solenoids, CO2
meter
29CEA Greenhouse Electricity Usage
Eliminated from average - Unusual
circumstances 1999 - aphid infestation shut down
30CEA GREENHOUSE ENERGY USE for PRODUCTION OF 1200
HEADS LETTUCE PER DAY CONTINUOUS PRODUCTION
FOOD-GRADE GH
Year 12 mo-Average kWh 12
mo-Average Therms
(electricity) (natural
gas) 1999 448,090 20,742 2000
663,680 38,544 2001 608,165
26,821 2002 515,360 28,898 2003
366,720 (thru Aug) 20,252 (thru Aug)
31CEA GREENHOUSE ENERGY USE for PRODUCTION OF 1200
HEADS LETTUCE PER DAY CONTINUOUS PRODUCTION
FOOD-GRADE GH
5y-Average kWH
5y-Average Therms
(electricity) (natural
gas) per Year 602,442 29,777 per Month
46,423 2,481 per Day
1,498 82 per Hour 62
3 per 5oz. Head 1.3 0.1
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34Underwood Farms GH ENERGY USE EQUIPMENT LIST
Headhouse Overhead lights, radio Growth
room 3 High Pressure Sodium (HPS) 600 W lamps,
timer Furnace room
Overhead lights, coal-furnace boiler pump
Greenhouse Hydroponic
pumps, 144 HPS 600W lamps, exhaust fans, vent
motor, weather station
- Underwood Greenhouse supplemental lighting
- in winter months only (Nov - Mar)
- during night (off-peak) hours only
- lights set on timer (no daily integral control)
35UDERWOOD FARM TEST SITE - Seedling room LIGHTS ON
TIMER Greenhouse Production area 5280 sq ft
Average Electricity Usage kWh/month
kWh/d TOTAL FARM ON OFF PEAK
USAGE 144 HPS 600W lamps on Timer
25,500 850 No Lamps used
17,000 567 OFF PEAK USAGE
ONLY 144 HPS 600W lamps on Timer
12,750 425 No Lamps used
3,500 117
36Need for Real Numbers
- AA Dairy has been meticulous in obtaining data
for more than 5 years - biogas production (total per cow)
- biogas composition (CO2 measurements)
- oil consumption (daily)
- electricity generated on the farm
- electricity sold to the grid
- difference between generated sold is
electricity used on the farm
37AA DAIRY
38Total biogas production and biogas production per
cow per day
39Engine-generator performance at AA Dairy
40Energy produced and net energy to grid at AA
Dairy
41Electricity Used by AA Dairy and Purchased from
the Grid March 9-12, 2001 (NYSEG Energy
Profiler Online)
Generating Capacity 70 kW
Electricity used (kW)
Electricity purchased (kW)
Time of day_at_ 5 min. intervals
42Bars show Standard Deviation
43140 kW (Fuel cell)
70 kW (IC)
44Fuel Cell Options
- Plug Power (PEM) lt 50kW (typical 4.5kW)
- EcoVillage at Ithaca (multiple households)
- Fuel Cell Energy (MCFC) 250kW
- Good size for 1000 cow unit
45Reducing H2S Concentration
- Dietary influence (limited ability)
- Direct precipitation with iron compound in
digester (ferric phosphate, ferric oxide) - Iron sponge (hydrated ferric oxide with
woodchips) - Commercial solid-oxide systems (zinc oxide/zinc
carbonate) - Activated carbon scrubbers
- Bioscrubbers
- Alkali solution (produce a fertilizer)
- Mixed cow-manure compost/wood chips
46Viability
- fuel cells would be economically viable in
rural areas, if they were put in specialized uses
that operate on a continuous basis, use heat
generated and that will pay a premium for such
characteristics as low emissions, low noise
levels, high quality power, modularity of design
and capacity to use different types of
hydrogen-based fuels. - Max Pfeffer
47Simplified Economic Analysis
- Estimation using present value analysis with
variables - discount rate, capital costs, operating costs,
insurance and taxes, purchase price of
electricity, selling price of electricity, and
electricity inflation - diesel engine, microturbine and fuel cell
comparisons - calculated using data from AA Dairy
48Economic Sensitivities
- All three energy converters are most sensitive
to - 1. The capital cost and
- 2. Price received for electricity produced.
- 3. Price paid for electricity from grid
49Net Present Value Analysis
- Based on 500 Cows
- Diesel Engine- payback in 3 to 7 years
(depending) - Microturbines- payback in 3 to 8 years
(depending) - Fuel Cell- payback not w/in 10 years (except if
1200/kW)
50Net Present Value Analysis
- Based on 1000 cows
- Diesel Engine- payback 2 to 7 years (depending)
- Microturbines- payback 3 to 8 years (depending)
- Fuel Cell- payback 3 years (if 1200/kW)
- - payback 9 years (if 2500/kW)
- - payback 11 years (if 5000/kW)
51New York Distribution of Households
Electricity Demand
- Households Households
Electricity -
Demand
-
gWh_at_5900kWh/hh/yr - Central cities 3,528,430 50 20,817
- Suburban areas 2,893,313 41 17,070
- Rural Areas 635,117 9 3,747
- TOTAL 7,056,860 41,635
52Comparison of Different Systems in Meeting
Electricity Needs
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54Integrated Entrepreneurial Approach
- Obviously reducing capital costs will improve the
economic scenarios (especially for the fuel
cell) BUT we suggest that a more potentially
innovative and economically successful route is
to create business and community partnerships to
enhance the value of energy produced, both
electrical and thermal. - Examples might include enterprises such as
greenhouses, aquaculture facilities, algal
farming, pasteurization on the farm, various food
and feed processing facilities, and most
comprehensive of all, providing a communitys
energy and jobs needs.
55Agricultural Importance
- Agriculture as a source for food, natural raw
materials for bioindustries and energy will
increasingly be a major engine to drive our
transition to a sustainable world.
56http//www.bee.cornell.edu/sustain/fuelcell/index.
htm