Modelling Energy Demand for a Fleet of Hydrogen-Electric Vehicles Interacting with a Clean Energy...

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Modelling Energy Demand for a Fleet of Hydrogen- Electric Vehicles Interacting with a Clean Energy Hub Faraz Syed*, Michael Fowler, David Wan, Yaser Maniyali Green Energy & Fuel Cell Lab, Chemical Engineering University of Waterloo International Conference on Hydrogen Production, Oshawa. May 3 rd – 6 th 2009

description

My presentation on hybrid vehicle fleets and smart charging at the inaugural International Conference on Hydrogen Production (ICH2P, http://www.ich2p.org/) held from May 3 to 6, 2009 at the UOIT campus in Oshawa, Ontario, Canada.

Transcript of Modelling Energy Demand for a Fleet of Hydrogen-Electric Vehicles Interacting with a Clean Energy...

Page 1: Modelling Energy Demand for a Fleet of Hydrogen-Electric Vehicles Interacting with a Clean Energy Hub, International Conference on Hydrogen Production (ICH2P) 2009

Modelling Energy Demand for a Fleet of Hydrogen-Electric Vehicles Interacting with a Clean Energy Hub

Faraz Syed*, Michael Fowler, David Wan, Yaser Maniyali

Green Energy & Fuel Cell Lab, Chemical EngineeringUniversity of Waterloo

International Conference on Hydrogen Production, Oshawa. May 3rd – 6th 2009

Page 2: Modelling Energy Demand for a Fleet of Hydrogen-Electric Vehicles Interacting with a Clean Energy Hub, International Conference on Hydrogen Production (ICH2P) 2009

Presentation Outline

1. Introduction2. Model Development3. Results4. Conclusions5. Future Work

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Page 3: Modelling Energy Demand for a Fleet of Hydrogen-Electric Vehicles Interacting with a Clean Energy Hub, International Conference on Hydrogen Production (ICH2P) 2009

Introduction

• Electricity: changes on supply-side:• Increasing use of distributed power

generation• Increasing use of renewable energy

(intermittent)

• Electricity: changes on demand-side:• Anticipated population growth• Increasing electricity demand for

transportation

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Page 4: Modelling Energy Demand for a Fleet of Hydrogen-Electric Vehicles Interacting with a Clean Energy Hub, International Conference on Hydrogen Production (ICH2P) 2009

Role of Hydrogen

• Hydrogen will be important for supply- and demand-side issues

• Supply side:• Electricity storage for peak load shaving

& renewable enabling

• Demand side:• Hydrogen-based transportation (reduced

impact, increased energy security)

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Page 5: Modelling Energy Demand for a Fleet of Hydrogen-Electric Vehicles Interacting with a Clean Energy Hub, International Conference on Hydrogen Production (ICH2P) 2009

Electrification of Transportation

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CVs• Gasolin

e

HEVs• Gasoline

PHEVs• Electricity,

some gasoline

PFCVs• Hydrogen

& electricity

Conventional Vehicles

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Electrification of Transportation

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CVs• Gasolin

e

HEVs• Gasoline

PHEVs• Electricity,

some gasoline

PFCVs• Hydrogen

& electricity

Hybrid Electric Vehicles

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Electrification of Transportation

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CVs• Gasolin

e

HEVs• Gasoline

PHEVs• Electricity,

some gasoline

PFCVs• Hydrogen

& electricity

Plug-in Hybrid Electric Vehicles

Page 8: Modelling Energy Demand for a Fleet of Hydrogen-Electric Vehicles Interacting with a Clean Energy Hub, International Conference on Hydrogen Production (ICH2P) 2009

Electrification of Transportation

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CVs• Gasolin

e

HEVs• Gasoline

PHEVs• Electricity,

some gasoline

PFCVs• Hydrogen

& electricity

Plug-in Fuel Cell Vehicles

Page 9: Modelling Energy Demand for a Fleet of Hydrogen-Electric Vehicles Interacting with a Clean Energy Hub, International Conference on Hydrogen Production (ICH2P) 2009

Integrated Energy System & Hubs• New integrated energy system (also

called the hydrogen economy) likely• Energy hubs will form interface

between supply & demand to provide:• Electricity storage for peak load shaving

& renewable enabling• Demand-side management (e.g. PHEV

charging)

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Page 10: Modelling Energy Demand for a Fleet of Hydrogen-Electric Vehicles Interacting with a Clean Energy Hub, International Conference on Hydrogen Production (ICH2P) 2009

Schematic of systems and energy interactions in the clean energy hub model 10

Clean Energy Hub

Electricity system

Hydrogen system

H2 storage

E H2 H2 E

Electricity Supply(10 wind turbines @ 20MW total capacity)

Energy Demand

Vehicle fleet(4,000 vehicles)

ElectricityHydrogen

Legend

Model Development: Clean Energy Hub

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Model Logic for Clean Energy Hub

If Supply > Demand

Store excess electricity as hydrogen

If Demand > Supply

Generate electricity from hydrogen

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Page 12: Modelling Energy Demand for a Fleet of Hydrogen-Electric Vehicles Interacting with a Clean Energy Hub, International Conference on Hydrogen Production (ICH2P) 2009

Model Development: Fleet

• Fleet consists of 4,000 hydrogen-electric vehicles

• Bottom-up approach: individual vehicle actions were simulated

• Review of existing vehicle models (e.g. PSAT & CRUISE):• each component is modelled• intended for vehicle designers• too complex & computationally expensive

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Vehicle architecture represented in PSAT 13

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Fleet Model: Architecture

• Developed simplified vehicle architecture

• Designed to be generic & applicable to variety of real vehicle architectures

• Two (2) energy inputs (electricity & hydrogen)

• Two (2) energy storage devices (ESS & HSS)

• Two (2) energy conversion devices

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Page 15: Modelling Energy Demand for a Fleet of Hydrogen-Electric Vehicles Interacting with a Clean Energy Hub, International Conference on Hydrogen Production (ICH2P) 2009

Simplified vehicle architecture used for fleet model 15

Vehicle

ESS

HSS

Electricity system

Hydrogen system

E KE

H2 KE

Wheels

Legend Electricity Hydrogen Kinetic Energy

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Fleet Model: Architecture

• Electricity Storage System (ESS) parameters:• Capacity [kWh]• State-of-charge (SOC) [%]

• Hydrogen Storage System (HSS) parameters:• Capacity [kg]• Amount stored [kg]

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Energy usage during travel modes 17

Charge depleting Charge sustaining

ESS

Stat

e of

Cha

rge

(%)

Distance travelled

HSS

stor

age

(kg)

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Fleet Model: Daily Operation

Travellingperiod

8 am – 11 pm

Charging period

12 am – 7 am

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Page 19: Modelling Energy Demand for a Fleet of Hydrogen-Electric Vehicles Interacting with a Clean Energy Hub, International Conference on Hydrogen Production (ICH2P) 2009

Fleet Model: Daily Operation

• Charging period is modelled every time-step (1 hr)

• Travelling period is modelled over entire period

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0 3 6 9 12 15 18 21 24 27 30 33 36 39 42 45 48 51 540%

50%

100%

Simulation Time [h]

SOC

[%]

Charging & travelling period demonstration 20

charging travellingtravelling charging

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Smart Charging/Charging Strategy

• Different charging strategies can be used:• Full-power charging• Minimum-power charging

• Full-power charging is simplest, limited only by charging station power

• Minimum-power charging targets full ESS charging over entire charging period 21

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Fleet Model: Travel Simulation

• Daily travel distance (i.e. driver behaviour) is an input

• Stochastic model in place of actual data• Gaussian distribution with mean of 30 km &

standard deviation of 1 km

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Daily travel

distance

Energy depletion function

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Energy depletion function for ESS & HSS 23

START

STOP

Does the given travel distance exceed the charge depleting range?

Deplete the ESS completely and subtract charge depleting range from

travel distance

NODeplete the ESS accordingly

YES

Does remaining distance exceed the charge sustaining range?

NODeplete the HSS accordingly

Deplete the HSS completely and subtract charge sustaining range from

travel distance

YES

Return total distance travelled

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Other Model Parameters

Parameter Value Unit

ESS capacity 10 kWh

ESS initial SOC 100 %

HSS capacity 4 kg

HSS initial mass 4 kg

Charge-depleting electricity consumption 6.5 km/kWh

Charge-sustaining hydrogen consumption 70 km/kg

Maximum charging station power 1.65 kW

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Parameters for an individual fuel cell electric vehicle

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Simulation

• Simulation run for 7-day period in January

• Two scenarios compared:• Case A: Full-power charging• Case B: Minimum-power charging

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Sample case electricity demand and supply profiles during charging26

12 AM 1 AM 2 AM 3 AM 4 AM 5 AM 6 AM0.0

1.0

2.0

3.0

4.0

5.0

6.0

7.0

8.0

Full-power charging Minimum-power chargingWind Power

Simulation Time [h]

Pow

er [M

W]

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Simulation Results

• Demand exceeded supply in both scenarios• hydrogen system filled the supply deficit to

ensure supply reliability.

• Effect of switching from full-power to minimum-power charging strategy:• 14.6% decrease in peak demand• 40.8% decrease in supply deficit

• electricity generation capacity of hydrogen system can be reduced by up to 40.8% as well

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Conclusions

• Developed a “bottom-up” fleet model for hydrogen-electric vehicles (PFCVs)

• Model output: fleet load profile (electricity & hydrogen)

• Demonstrated smart-charging simulation through charging strategy

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Future Work

• PHEV fleet modelling: gasoline instead of hydrogen

• Per-hour travel modelling• Need better driver behaviour data

• Stochastic charging: no fixed charging period for fleet

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Page 30: Modelling Energy Demand for a Fleet of Hydrogen-Electric Vehicles Interacting with a Clean Energy Hub, International Conference on Hydrogen Production (ICH2P) 2009

Thank You

Questions?

Faraz SyedChemical EngineeringUniversity of Waterloo

[email protected]