Comparative energy analysis of hydrogen carriers as energy source on ships

Journal Article (2025)
Author(s)

E. S. van Rheneen (TU Delft - Ship Design, Production and Operations)

J.T. Padding (TU Delft - Complex Fluid Processing)

A. Kana (TU Delft - Ship Design, Production and Operations)

K Visser (TU Delft - Ship Design, Production and Operations)

Research Group
Complex Fluid Processing
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1080/20464177.2024.2448057
More Info
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Publication Year
2025
Language
English
Research Group
Complex Fluid Processing
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Abstract

Hydrogen carriers are attractive alternative fuels for the shipping sector. They are zero-emission, have high energy densities, and are safe, available, and easy to handle. Sodium borohydride, potassium borohydride, dibenzyltoluene, n-ethylcarbazole, and ammoniaborane are hydrogen carriers with high theoretical energy densities. The energy density is paramount to implementing hydrogen carriers as a high energy density enables compact and lightweight storage. The effective energy density depends on integrating heat and masses with energy converters. This combination defines the energy efficiency and, thus, the energy density of the system. This paper addresses the effective energy density of the hydrogen carriers, including the dehydrogenation process. Using a 0D model, we combined the five carriers with two types of fuel cells, namely proton exchange membrane (PEM) and solid oxide fuel cells (SOFC), an internal combustion engine and a gas turbine. N-ethylcarbazole and dibenzyltoluene offer medium energy densities, reaching almost 4 MJ/kg. However, the effective energy density of sodium borohydride and ammoniaborane is very high, up to 15 MJ/kg, including the energy converter. This is similar to the energy density of marine diesel oil combined with an internal combustion engine. Thus, we conclude hydrogen carriers are alternative fuels that deserve more attention because of their strong potential to make shipping zero-emission.