Fuel Cell and Battery Hybrid System Optimization

Towards Increased Range and Endurance

Master Thesis (2018)
Author(s)

J. Hoogendoorn (TU Delft - Aerospace Engineering)

Contributor(s)

M. Voskuij – Mentor

Alte de Boer – Mentor

Roel van Benthem – Mentor

L. L.M. Veldhuis – Graduation committee member

Paul Roling – Graduation committee member

Faculty
Aerospace Engineering
Copyright
© 2018 Joey Hoogendoorn
More Info
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Publication Year
2018
Language
English
Copyright
© 2018 Joey Hoogendoorn
Graduation Date
29-03-2018
Awarding Institution
Delft University of Technology
Programme
['Aerospace Engineering']
Sponsors
Royal Netherlands Aerospace Centre NLR
Faculty
Aerospace Engineering
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Abstract

Aircraft manufacturers are increasingly exploring emission-free flight or emission reduction for larger passenger aircraft. The low energy density of state-of-the-art battery technology limits the application to small, electric, fixed wing aircraft up to a flight time of approximately one hour. To overcome these limits, a combination of fuel cells and batteries to exploit the benefits of battery power density and hydrogen energy density was studied. Current Lithium-Ion battery cells reach approximately 1.6 kW/kg of maximum power density, much higher than fuel cell systems. On the other hand, the energy storage capacity of suitable hydrogen storage methods is much larger than battery cells, the latter have an energy density of 240 Wh/kg.

Because most demonstrated applications are for fixed wing aircraft, the unmanned GeoCopter GC-201 helicopter was used for performance requirements, weight and volume analysis. The study focuses on the preliminary sizing of the powertrain and the optimization of fuel cell and mission profile variables for this vehicle. Helicopter performance modelling, fuel cell static behavior as well as a battery discharge simulation are combined with lower fidelity models for other components.

The study results in a comparison of battery-only and fuel cell-battery configurations through payload-range diagrams, allowing for a quick evaluation of application areas. These mainly show that batteries excel at high payload, low range applications whereas a fuel cell-battery combination shows clear advantages at low payload, longer range applications. Liquid hydrogen will be shown to be comparable to the current micro gas turbine powered rotorcraft, with 400 and 500 km range capabilities respectively. Range capabilities for 300 bar and 700 bar compressed gas tank storage options show 140 and 180 km, with battery-only reaching a maximum range of 80 km.

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