What Happened to Fuel Cells (on Ships)?

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What Happened to Fuel Cells (on Ships)?

Rich Delpizzo Government Operations ABS Washington DC SNAME Chair, Panel M-45 (Fuel Cells) June 2013

On Predictions… “I confess that in 1901 I said to my brother Orville that man would not fly for fifty years. Two years later we ourselves made flights. This demonstration of my impotence as a prophet gave me such a shock that ever since I have distrusted myself and avoided all predictions.” - Wilbur Wright (1867-1912) [In 1908)]

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Outline ●

Introduction: The Promise



Just What Is a Fuel Cell and How Do They Work? ●



Some Marine Applications

Picture it: America, 2003 ●

Fuel Cell Progress



Land and Marine Applications



What Happened from 2003 to 2013?



Are Fuel Cells Dead?

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How a Fuel Cell Works

William Grove 1838

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Fuel Cells Today

Alkaline (AFC) Proton Exchange Membrane (PEMFC) Phosphoric Acid (PAFC) Direct Methanol Fuel Cell (DMFC) Molten Carbonate (MCFC) Solid Oxide (SOFC) 5

The Fuel Cell (FC) System Fuel Air

Hydrogen

Fuel Cell

Water Heat

Fuel Processing Inverter

H2 Storage 6

Molten Carbonate (MCFC) – internal reformer

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Fuel Cell Properties Operating Temperature

AFC

PEMFC

PAFC

DMFC

MCFC

SOFC

70-100

70-100

120-200

70-100

650

800-1000 Internal or External

Reformer

External

External

External

Internal

Internal or External

Material & Catalyst

Carbon & Nickel

Carbon & Platinum

Graphite & Platinum

Platinum & Ruthenium

Stainless steel Ceramic & & Nickel Perovskites

Electrolyte

Potassium hydroxide

Solid membrane

Phosphoric acid

Solid membrane

Carbonated metal

Ceramics

Efficiency

50-60

40-50

40-50

20-50

>60

50-60

AFC – Alkaline

PEMFC - Proton Exchange Membrane

PAFC - Phosphoric Acid

MCFC - Molten Carbonate

SOFC - Solid Oxide

DMFC - Direct Methanol Fuel Cell 8

Why are they so promising? 

Nearly Zero Emissions



High Electrical Efficiencies



Modular 

Distributed Power



Homes outside the power grid (‘PIMBY’)



Mobile Power

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Why are they so promising? 

Freedom from fossil fuels 

Methane (CH4, or natural gas)



Propane



Diesel



Hydrogen



Methanol and Bio Fuels



Ethanol



Sodium Borohydride



Ammonia

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Why are they so promising? 

Silent Operation 

Residential use



Research Ships



Submarines

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Back to 2003…

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Air Emissions Requirements 

Emissions 

Marine Initiatives (MARPOL ANNEX VI) – Began drafting in the 1990s – Annex VI entered into force on 19 May 2005 – US added ECAs in 2008 – Additional requirements in 2010



CA Emissions Requirements – Testing waived for Fuel Cells (‘ZEV’)

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Fuel Cell Car Initiatives          

BMW Chrysler Ford GM Honda Mazda Nissan Opel Toyota Volkswagen

GM CEO Rick Wagoner: - Fuel cells the ‘Holy Grail’ of energy 14

Current Events Leading to 2003: The Turbulent Middle East     

Iranian Revolution (1979) The ‘Tanker War’ & USS Stark (1980’s) Persian Gulf War (1990-1991) Iraq War (2003-2011) Terrorism originating in SWA: – Beirut (1983) – Khobar Towers (1996, SA) – USS Cole (2000, Yemen) – September 11, 2001 (Al-Qaeda)

President George W. Bush - “Fuel cells offer an incredible opportunity” [to reduce dependence on imported oil, calling fuel cell-powered automobiles] “the wave of the future.” Source: State of the Union Address 2003 15

FreedomCAR & The Hydrogen Fuel Initiative 

2003 - the Bush Administration announced the FreedomCAR program, an industry-government cooperative effort to develop fuel cell vehicles.



An expanded initiative, entitled the FreedomCAR and FUEL initiative, that focused more on infrastructure issues, was announced soon after.

"Tonight I am proposing $1.2 billion in research funding so that America can lead the world in developing clean, hydrogen-powered automobiles." – President George W. Bush, State of the Union Address, January 28, 2003

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Fuel Cells Killed the Electric Car!

Sort of…. 17 17

Marine Fuel Cell Applications (late 1990’s to 2005)

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Russia – Project KATRAN and Kristall-27 AIP System 

Began in 1978



Intended for 3 Classes of submarines: 

Piranha (midget submarine)



Poisk-6 (deep-diving submersible vehicle)



Sirena-K (submersible transport)



By 1987, work terminated due to funding except for the Piranha Class design



Result of this research was the Kristall-20 fuel-cell 

Designed for use in the Amur Class



Possible retrofit in Kilo Class



Funding challenges

Sources: (1) Navy News This Week (2) Military Parade www.milparade.com (3) Canadian American Strategic Review 19

Germany – Type 212A Class 

Crew of 27, 1450Mt



First marine fuel cell power plant in series production, diesel surface operation



Air Independent Propulsion System consisting of 9 Siemens Proton Exchange (PEM) Fuel Cells modules



Each module produces 30 to 50 kW each

Sources: HDW, Defense News, Canadian American Strategic Review 20

Canada 

300kW Ballard PEM using methanol (CH3OH).



Possible configuration would allow 4kts for 30 days submerged.

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US Interagency Working Group Navy Shipboard Fuel Cell Program (since 1997) 

Foster use of Fuel Cells for ships using diesel fuels



Transfer technology to the public



Actively involve industry in development efforts



Reduce duplicative efforts on marine fuel cells

USCG NOAA ONR DOT

NAVSEA MARAD DOE

Source: Don Hoffman, ONR 22

Navy Shipboard Fuel Cell Program 

NSWC Naval Fuel Cell Development Laboratory Philadelphia



Evaluate a 500 kW molten carbonate fuel cell from Fuel Cell Energy, Inc. of Danbury, Connecticut.



At the completion of this demonstration the module will be installed aboard a ship. Final Goals are: 

Scale up to 2.5 mW with acceptable power density;



Integrate and simplify fuel reforming equipment;



Achieve minimum system level efficiency of 70%;



Achieve production cost of $1200/kW

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UK 

DERA Research focused on similar issues as the US Navy: 

Fuel storage efficiencies



Types of fuels used



Since 2001, work on fuel cells continues at QinetiQ, formerly part of DERA

Source: Canadian American Strategic Review; DERA, QinetiQ 24

European Union Fuel Cell Technology – Ships 



Reviewing different fuels: 

LNG



Low S Diesel



Compressed and liquefied H2

Source: www.fcship.com

Reviewing fuel cells for ship service and propulsion power

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San Francisco Bay Water Transit Authority

Zero Emission Fuel Cell Powered Ferryboat (ZEF)



Fuel Cells and Solar Cells



Battery-Electric Hybrid, using H2



49 Passenger



Treasure Island Run (5 NM)



12 –15 Knots (200-500 kW)

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Fuel Cell Taxis

Enable Fuel Cell DCH Technology (uses hybrid FC/H2 turbine)

Anuvu Fuel Cell Seaworthy H2 on Demand Duffy Electric Boats (SNAME OCT 2003)

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Japan - URASHIMA 

World's first deep sea probe run on fuel cells operational in 2005



10m long torpedo-shaped Autonomous Underwater Vehicle (AUV)



Urashima is designed to dive as deep as 3,500 meters with a cruising range of up to 300 kilometers

Source: Associated Press, NSWC-CD (UJNR)

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What Happened from 2003 to 2013?

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Some Challenges 



Evolving Technology - Too much hype early on 

Early versions didn’t perform as expected.



Municipalities were apprehensive of fuel cells



No standards to guide the building of systems

Cost of Hydrogen: In 2003, hydrogen was four times as expensive to produce as gasoline (when produced from its most affordable source, natural gas).

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Some Challenges 

Creating Effective Hydrogen Storage: Hydrogen storage systems were inadequate for use in the wide range of vehicles that consumers demand.



No filling stations existed for Hydrogen



Creating Affordable Hydrogen Fuel Cells: In 2003, fuel cells were ten times more expensive than internal combustion engines.



R & D Funding shortfalls

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Fuel Cell Issues 

Fuel Cell 

Reliability



Marine Environmental Criteria (ship motion, humidity, etc.)



High Temperature



Component Construction (electrolytes, corrosive materials)



Transient Loads



Expensive components 

Platinum



Gold

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Reformer Issues 

Processing (Reformer) technology: 

The more complex the fuel, the more complex the process to extract hydrogen from it



Impurities



Additional challenges for a marine environment

H | H-C-H | H

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Fuel Cell System Issues 

Fuel 

Safety issues for non-traditional fuels – Unfamiliarity & Concerns of Volatility – Pipe lines & Leak sensors



Storage – Processing – Restrictions and Limitations of Materials

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Properties of H2 

Physical data 

Appearance: colorless gas



Melting point: -259 C



Boiling point: -253 C



Critical temperature -240 C



Vapor density: 0.07 (air = 1)



Flammability range in air: 4 - 75%



(Natural Gas: Explosive limits: 5 - 15%)

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Hydrogen’s Past

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Gaseous Fuel Storage Issues 

High Pressure Tank 

Not as much energy stored as equivalent volume of gasoline – High Pressure composite tank standards were quite new – Hydrogen precipitation issues







Cryogenic Tank 

High degree of insulation



Reliquefaction not practical

Metal Hydride Storage 

Low pressure



Very Heavy!

Storage issues 

Regulatory / municipality concerns 37

Alternative Fuel Stations in America (DoE)

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Hydrogen Stations in America (DoE)

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Hydrogen Stations in America (DoE)

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FreedomCAR 

Funded moderately for about 5 years



Criticisms: 

Taking funding from renewable energy initiatives



Technology isn’t ready for widespread use



Department of Energy cuts funding for fuel cell technologies by 60% (to US$70 million).



Secretary of Energy Steven Chu's presentation portrays this as "moving away from funding vehicular hydrogen fuel cells to technologies with more immediate promise."

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Will We Ever Get Our Own Fuel Cell Car?

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Are Fuel Cells Dead? 

Absolutely not!



The fuel cell and hydrogen revolution is still happening, but much quieter and slower than first thought.



The following is far from all-inclusive, but hopefully will prove illustrative of the work that has been accomplished, and will soon be done….

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Carbon Molecular Nanostructure Technology 

Research by National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) and others



Developing a solid-state storage system that is safer than physical storage systems, and could potentially store more hydrogen per unit volume



Solid-state systems composed of microscopic carbon tubes chemically or physically bind hydrogen to a solid material

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Carbon Molecular Nanostructure Technology 

Still under development



First introduced in 1998 Source: Discover

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Carbon Molecular Nanostructure Technology

Used by permission: Original graphic von Schwarzm (30 Aug 2004); Made using C4D /Cartoonrenderer, GNU FDL; www.wikipedia.org

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Millennium Cell- Seaworthy Systems – CCDOTT TM Hydrogen on Demand 

Releases Hydrogen stored in sodium borohydride (NaBH4 made from sodium borate or “borax”) (“FREEDOM FUEL”)



Sodium borohydride is nonflammable, non-explosive and safe to produce, store and transport



Limited amount of gaseous fuel present in the system at any given time



Produces about the same amount of energy per gallon as that of gasoline

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Germany – Type 214 Class 

Improved Type 214 Class developed by HDW



Increased to 65m in length and 1700 Mt



Siemens PEM fuel cells increased to 120 kW per module



Construction continues at both Hyundai and Daewoo

Sources: HDW, Defense News, Canadian American Strategic Review 48

Type 214 (Export Version)

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Project 677 Lada Class (Russian Navy)

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Maritime Projects 

Large-scale marine concepts have been tested: 

US Ship Service Fuel Cell (SSFC) project (ended 2011)



FELICITAS (2005-2008)



MC-WAP (2005-2011)



Viking Lady (2012)



Norway-based FellowSHIP: 

DNV



Wartsila



Eidesvik

 

330 kW fuel cell 7000 hours operation

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Maritime Projects 



CMAL (Caledonian Maritime Assets Ltd) 

30 ferries operating company



Studying a zero emission hydrogen FC ferry

Wallenius Lines – M/V Undine   

Wartsila WFC 20 SOFC Run on methanol Resulted in joint venture for Wartsila & Versa Power Systems for FC systems

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Maritime Projects – Fuel Cells in Ports 

2008 – Hamburg 



Fuel cell powered forklift

2013 – Helsinki 

FC feeding the port grid



Backup power



Wartsila FC auxiliary power unti (APU) – port power – Ships approaching port



2013 – LA & Long Beach 

1/3 CO and 10% NOx from cargo handling



Tyrano class-8 rig demonstrator



Short-haul drayage terminal tractors

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Feasibility and Design Implications of Fuel Cell Power for Sealift Ships - Jing Suna, John Stebeb, and Colen Kennell 

Written in 2010



“…fuel cell powered LMSR has tremendous potential in reducing fuel consumption and NOx emissions. The associated economic and environmental benefits present a great incentive for naval and maritime industry to pursue fuel cell technology for the next generation green cargo ships.”



“The extended range and improved endurance, together with the reduced fuel cost and environmental impact, also represent a unique opportunity for military sealift ships.”



Good deal of further study and research needed.

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Fuel Cell Standards 

Application of Industry Guidelines and Related Criteria 

SNAME T&R 55, titled “An Evaluation of Fuel Cells for Commercial Ship Applications” and associated technical society reference documents – Being Revised

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Fuel Cell Standards 

ANSI Z 21.83 (Fuel Cell Power Plants)



IMO (IMDG), US DOT CFR 49



ASME





PTC 50 (Fuel Cell Power System Performance)



B31.12 (Hydrogen Piping)

NFPA 

853 (Installation of Stationary FC Power Plants)



70 (NEC) Article 692 (Fuel Cells)



52: (NEC) Article 692 (Fuel Cells)



50A, 50 B, 54, 55 – Hydrogen related

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Fuel Cell Standards 

CSA (Component Acceptance Service) 

PEM FC



Residential FC



Portable FC Appliances



Hydrogen Generators



ISO TC 197 (Hydrogen Technologies)



UL 

1741 (Inverters, Converters and Controllers)



2264 (Hydrogen Appliances)



2265 (Replacement FC Power Units for Appliances)



IEC TC 105 (62282-3-1 - Fuel Cell Power Plants)



Also: IEEE, SAE, ICC, NES

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Fuel Cell Torpedo?

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Government Initiatives (2011)



Hydrogen and Fuel Cells Interagency Working Group  



Manufacturing Fuel Cell Manhattan Project Presented by the Benchmarking and Best Practices Center of Excellence (ONR)

Beyond Demonstration: The Role of Fuel cells in DoD’s Energy Strategy 

Focused on: – Distributed Power Generation – Backup Power – Unmanned Vehicles

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Last Week

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This Week

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Next Week

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Hyundai ix35 Fuel Cell SUV

First Production Fuel Cell Car 63 63

Honda FCX Clarity

64 64

Mercedes, Ford and Nissan

65 65

Airbus eGenius & Boeing FC Demonstrator

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The Era of Natural Gas? 

LNG Supply and Demand 

Natural gas will be playing a greater role in the global energy mix



Increased use for transportation and power plants – OSVs, ferries, container carriers, tankers, offshore drilling units



Environmental drivers – Emission Control Areas (ECAs)



US becoming an exporter



LNG Demand in China, Japan & India

Source: Lloyd’s List, IEA, Drewry, OSC, Seatrade & Poten

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Global Shale Gas Basins: Top Reserve Holders

Source: EIA based on Advanced Resources International Inc. data, BP

Reuters graphic/Catherine Trevethan

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Import/Export Applications

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US Fuel Prices

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The Age of Natural Gas 

Natural gas will be playing a greater role in the global energy mix for the foreseeable future



US is poised to become a new exporter of LNG



LNG as fuel for the marine industry will increase dramatically 

OSVs, ferries, container carriers, tankers, offshore drilling units



Many ‘Golfcart’ efforts



Possible use of MCFCs?



By 2030 shale sources will likely make up 1/3 of the total US oil and gas production



Environmental drivers – Emission Control Areas (ECAs)

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New Endurance Record for Small Electric Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (May 2013) 

Researchers at the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory flew their fuel cell powered Ion Tiger UAV for 48 hours and 1 minute on April 16-18 by using liquid hydrogen fuel in a new, NRL developed, cryogenic fuel storage tank and delivery system.

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More in May 2013 

Engineers Devise New Way to Produce Clean Hydrogen (Duke University)



Significant Improvement in Performance of Solar-Powered Hydrogen Generation 

National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) have shed new light on what may become a cost-effective way to generate hydrogen gas directly from water and sunlight.

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June 2013 

Hydrogen Powered Hyundai ix35 Fuel Cell Vehicles Delivered in Europe 





Delivered to the city of Copenhagen in Denmark, during the opening ceremony of Denmark’s first hydrogen refueling station. The 15 ix35 cars are the first hydrogen powered vehicles manufactured on a production line to be introduced in Europe.

Metal-Free Catalyst Outperforms Platinum in Fuel Cell 

Researchers from South Korea, Case Western Reserve University and University of North Texas have discovered an inexpensive and easily produced catalyst that performs better than platinum in oxygen-reduction reactions.

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June 2013

Are we now moving from Emission Control Areas (ECAs) to ‘Sound Control Areas (SCAs)’?

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The Dreamers and Doers “Those who say it can't be done are usually interrupted by others doing it.” - James Baldwin, American writer, playwright, poet, and civil rights activist

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