The present disclosure relates to an integrated energy management system including control systems for use with a refrigeration system powdered by a fuel cell, and in particular a proton exchange membrane (PEM) fuel cell. The integrated energy management system is used for regulating the ambient temperature of an environment.
Heating and cooling systems of different types are commonly used to control ambient temperatures of internal spaces of buildings and vehicles and to cool refrigeration volumes such as transport trailers, refrigerators and freezers. Generally, heating and cooling systems consume electrical or mechanical energy to drive a heating and cooling cycle. Some systems, for example heat pumps, include valves adapted to switch the flow of refrigerant through heat exchangers, referred to as condensers and evaporators, so that the system can provide heating or cooling depending on the outdoor temperature. For convenience, systems configured to provide heating or cooling by changing the state of a fluid medium to transfer heat will be referred to as refrigeration systems.
Air cooling and vapor-compression are two common refrigeration systems. In air cooling systems, a fan or series of fans causes ambient air to flow over or through the target space. The air absorbs heat and transfers the heat to an external space. However, the cooling capacity depends on the air temperature of the ambient air, which can vary widely. As a result, air cooling may be unreliable, particularly in tropical and desert environments.
In a vapor-compression refrigeration system, the system transfers heat through a fluid refrigerant that is periodically cycled through a condenser and an evaporator. The cooling effect is provided when the refrigerant enters the evaporator, where the refrigerant's phase changes from a liquid-vapor mixture to a saturated-vapor at low pressure. The refrigerant then passes into a compressor where pressure of the refrigerant is increased as it is mechanically compressed and the refrigerant is transformed into a superheated-vapor. From the compressor, the refrigerant enters into the condenser where the heat picked up in the evaporator is rejected to the atmosphere, and the refrigerant changes back to a saturated-liquid. The refrigerant then returns to its initial liquid-vapor state after passing through an expansion valve. The energy input to drive the cycle is provided in the refrigerant compression stage. Vapor-compression systems are more reliable than air cooling systems but consume more energy and are generally heavier.
Accordingly, there is a need in the art for a more energy-efficient, effective means of powering refrigeration systems. It would be further advantageous if the thermal and electrical energy to be provided to a refrigeration system was provided at a highly efficient, consistent manner, with little to no gas emissions.
The present disclosure is directed to generating and managing thermal energy in a fuel cell coupled refrigeration system. For example, a heat exchanger couples, directly or indirectly, to a fuel cell and a heat driven refrigeration system to transfer at least a portion of thermal energy generated by the fuel cell to the refrigeration system, thereby driving a refrigeration cycle of the refrigeration system. In some embodiments, the heat exchanger may further be coupled with an electric heating device such to transfer at least a portion of the thermal energy generated by the electric heating device to the refrigeration system as an alternative or supplemental thermal energy source from the fuel cell. A control system is coupled with the fuel cell coupled refrigeration system to form an integrated energy management system that controls operation of the fuel cell coupled refrigeration system.
In one embodiment the present disclosure is directed to an integrated energy management system for generating and managing thermal energy. The system comprises: a fuel cell operable to generate electric energy and thermal energy; an energy storage device operable to receive at least a portion of the electric energy generated by the fuel cell; a refrigeration system including a refrigerant; a heat exchanger operable to transfer at least a portion of the thermal energy from the fuel cell to the refrigeration system to heat the refrigerant; and a control system operable to control operation of the fuel cell.
In another embodiment the present disclosure is directed to a method of operating an integrated energy management system. The method comprises generating electric energy and thermal energy with a fuel cell; storing at least a portion of the electric energy in an energy storage device; and driving a refrigeration cycle of a refrigeration system with energy provided by a first source of energy and with thermal energy from the fuel cell.
It has been unexpectedly discovered that using thermal energy generated by fuel cells to drive refrigeration cycles of a refrigeration system provides both functional and financial benefits to the user, particularly homeowners. Particularly, the average energy output of the fuel cell is decreased as the electrical load of the HVAC system is decreased or eliminated, compared to the conventional electrically driven heating, ventilation, and air conditioning (HVAC) system, enabling a higher efficiency fuel cell operation. Note that fuel cell efficiency for a given fuel cell stack increases as its power level decreases. Further, surplus electrical energy generated by the fuel cell can additionally be used to power the electrical grid of a building or residence, providing alternative or supplemental electrical energy during periods when electrical costs are highest for utilities (e.g., summer months).
Further, an integrated energy management system for controlling the operation of the fuel cell coupled refrigeration system allows for further efficiency in a heating and cooling operation, thereby reducing the total energy cost to the consumer. Additionally, the integrated energy management system advantageously operates to recharge or condition any additional electrical energy storage devices and to reduce compressor load in vapor compression cycles such that the system is able to attain longer lifetimes than conventional HVAC and energy storage systems. Moreover, since the fuel cell is able to provide heat generated from the power producing electrochemical reaction, and since this heat can be used to promote cooling, these can be used to provide temperature regulation for high cost electrical components such as batteries, control systems, or power electronic devices. Furthermore, since the output power of the fuel cell is inherently direct current (DC), it can power DC or brushless DC electric motors that could power the compressor used in a vapor compression refrigeration cycle, thus further increasing the efficiency of the refrigeration system and enhancing its life.
Accordingly, the integrated energy management system of the present disclosure can be used as an upgrade or alternative to the conventional HVAC system, which is a high cost appliance, to provide for more energy-efficient heating/cooling of an environment.
The above-mentioned and other disclosed features, and the manner of attaining them, will become more apparent and will be better understood by reference to the following description of disclosed embodiments taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, wherein:
Corresponding reference characters indicate corresponding parts throughout the several views. Although the drawings represent embodiments of various features and components according to the present disclosure, the drawings are not necessarily to scale and certain features may be exaggerated in order to better illustrate and explain the present disclosure. The exemplification set out herein illustrates embodiments of the disclosure, and such exemplifications are not to be construed as limiting the scope of the disclosure in any manner.
The present disclosure is directed to an integrated energy management system for managing thermal and electrical energy generated in a fuel cell coupled refrigeration system. Thermal energy generated by the fuel cell can be used to drive a refrigeration cycle of the refrigeration system in an energy-efficient operation as an alternative or as a supplement to conventional electrically driven refrigeration systems. Exemplary refrigeration systems include vapor-compression, absorption and ejector refrigeration systems. The electrical energy generated by the fuel cell may be provided to an energy storage device or to electrically drive a primary or supplemental compressor in a vapor compression cycle or to generate heat through a resistance load to drive an absorption or ejector refrigeration system. Exemplary energy storage devices include batteries and capacitor banks.
These and other features of the integrated energy management systems and methods of the present disclosure, as well as some of the many optional variations and additions, are described in detail hereafter.
As used herein, the term “heat driven refrigeration system” refers to a heating and cooling refrigeration cycle that eliminates the need for a mechanical compressor and instead uses a thermal energy source to drive the cycle. Exemplary heat driven refrigeration systems include absorbent and ejector refrigeration systems.
As used herein, the term “refrigeration cycle” refers to a model of moving heat from one location (“source”) at a lower temperature to another location (“heat sink”) at a higher temperature using mechanical work or thermal work.
As used herein, the term “thermal load” refers to any component or device suitable to supply or receive heat. Exemplary thermal loads include electronic components, passenger cabins, battery compartments, electronic circuits, storage compartments, ice makers, dehumidifiers, and the like. The foregoing and later described embodiments describe heat transfer devices which may be referred to as heat exchangers (e.g., evaporators, condensers and generators).
As used herein, the term “generator” refers to a heat transfer device which thermally couples, directly or indirectly, a refrigeration system and a fuel cell such that excess heat from the fuel cell may heat the refrigerant of the refrigeration system. In one embodiment according to the disclosure, a generator includes a body. Embedded in the body are a refrigerant circuit and a heating device. The heating device is configured to heat the refrigerant in the refrigerant circuit. The body may comprise a number of integrated components. A fuel cell coupled refrigeration system may be referred to herein as a heat driven refrigeration system. Heat transfer devices may be liquid-to-liquid, gas-to-gas, surface-to-liquid and surface to gas heat transfer devices. Air is an exemplary gas.
As used herein, the term “evaporator” is a component that is thermally coupled, directly or indirectly, to a thermal load to remove heat therefrom.
The foregoing embodiments and additional embodiments of the disclosure will now be described with reference to the figures. Referring to
As shown in
In one embodiment, fuel cell coupled refrigeration system 25 of the integrated energy management system 10 is comprised in a building. Energy source 30 comprises an electrical power grid (not shown) providing AC power to refrigeration system 50, in this case a vapor-compression refrigeration system, through power circuit 40. Energy management system 44 monitors thermal load 52 of refrigeration system 50 and forecasts the power requirements of refrigeration system 50 by application of known thermodynamic and energy balance principles involving temperature differential, mass and fluid flow parameters. The forecast may be based, for example, on historical trends, external ambient temperature measurements and operating profiles. An exemplary profile includes an ambient temperature setpoint and a demand formula based on the ambient temperature setpoint and an actual temperature. Energy management system 44 determines how much electrical energy and heat to produce with fuel cell 60 based on the forecast, a profile, and the availability of AC energy from the power grid.
In one example, power circuit 40 includes an inverter device, or inverter (not shown). In one variation, energy management system 44 incorporates a fuel cell control system such as fuel cell management system (FMS) 140 described with reference to
In another variation, energy management system 44 determines, based on a cost threshold of electrical energy supplied by the power grid, whether it is economical to sell electrical energy back to the power grid and, if so, operates power circuit 40 to transfer electrical energy generated by fuel cell 60 to the power grid.
In one example, the cost threshold is the peak power cost of the electrical energy supplied by the power grid. In another example, the cost threshold is a predetermined difference between the energy cost of the power grid energy and the fuel cell supplied energy.
In a further variation, power circuit 40 includes an inverter (not shown) and energy management system 44 is operable, with power circuit 40, to regulate power received from the power grid and thus manage opportunity costs. In one example, opportunity costs are managed by scheduling energy consumption. Generally, scheduling comprises controlling target temperatures and operating loads so as to minimize consumption during peak hours. The inverter provides a central DC bus. In one example, converters are provided to convert the DC voltage and AC voltage from different power sources (e.g. solar arrays, fuel cells and AC generators) to a common DC bus voltage. Power management system 44 is configured to regulate current drawn from the DC bus voltage by the refrigeration system and the electrical loads. Based on the current draw, energy storage system charge level, and refrigeration parameters, energy management system 44 determines how much energy to draw from the power grid.
In some embodiments, energy management system is similar to energy management system 178, described with reference to
In one example, the memory device 244 includes a plurality of operating profiles for controlling power circuit, refrigeration system 150, 308, electrical load 104 and fuel cell system 100. Each profile is configured to control operation of the devices in a particularized way such that energy management system 178 can change operation of the system 178 by selecting a different operational profile. Further, fuel cell coupled refrigeration system 300 may be configured with different modes of operation which may be comprised in a single profile or embodied in different profiles.
In one embodiment of multi-mode operations, a profile has a first and a second mode of operation and energy management system 178 switches between the first and second modes depending on predetermined conditions. In a cost-saving mode of operation, electrical energy produced by fuel cell 100 is converted to AC energy and supplied, together with AC energy from the power grid, to refrigeration system 150, 308. Fuel supplied by fuel cell fuel supply 105 is consumed by fuel cell 100 to produce electrical energy, which is consumed by refrigeration system 150, 308, and excess heat. The excess heat is applied to refrigeration system 150, 308 to reduce consumption of electrical energy by refrigeration system 150, 308. Exemplary fuels include natural gas and propane gas. Thus, operation of fuel cell 100 reduces consumption of electrical energy from the electrical power grid while consuming fuel cell fuel. The cost-saving mode of operation is most economical during periods of time during which the cost of energy received from the power grid is higher than the cost of energy obtained from conversion of fuel by the fuel cell.
In another cost-saving mode of operation, referring back to
In a reliability mode of operation, electrical energy produced by fuel cell 60 is supplied to refrigeration system 50 to operate refrigeration system 50 even if power from energy source 30 is unavailable. The DC energy from fuel cell 60 is inverted into AC energy and the AC energy is supplied to refrigeration system 50. In another example, energy source 30 supplements the DC energy supplied from fuel cell 60 to operate refrigeration system 50.
In yet another example, fuel cell coupled refrigeration system 25 is comprised in an electric vehicle and energy source 30 comprises a mechanical energy source driving the compressor of a vapor-compression refrigeration system. In a further example, fuel cell coupled refrigeration system 25 is comprised in an electric vehicle and refrigeration system 50 comprises an absorption or ejection refrigeration system.
In a further variation of the present embodiment, a first mode of operation causes energy storage device 34 to maintain a substantially full charge while a second mode causes energy storage device 34 to substantially deplete its charge. Thus, in the second mode energy storage device 34 is a net provider of electrical energy. When selected, the profile enables the system to charge in the first mode and to provide energy to the power grid in the second mode. In another variation, the profile is configured to operate the refrigeration system 50 primarily from energy source 30 when the cost of energy source 30 is low and to operate fuel cell 60 when the cost of energy from energy source 30 is high. The profile includes values for low and high cost thresholds. In a further variation, a profile includes operating schedules which enable electrical load 54 to be operated during low power grid cost periods. In a yet further variation, a profile causes refrigeration system 50 to maintain a target refrigeration parameter, e.g. temperature and/or temperature variation, near a limit of a range when it is economical to do so and near the opposite limit otherwise. For example, the profile may be defined to cool a target space to the low temperature limit of the range when grid energy costs are low and to operate near the upper temperature limit when grid energy costs are high. Thus, the refrigeration system 50 operates more during low cost periods than during high cost periods. Furthermore, the profile may cause energy storage device 34 to charge during the low cost period and discharge during the high cost period after the target space approaches the high temperature limit. The profile is selected from a plurality of profiles manually or automatically. In one variation, the user selects a new profile with a user input device (not shown). For example, a user may choose a profile to draw energy primarily from fuel cell 60 and energy storage device 34 if energy source 30 becomes unreliable even if the profile does not result in the most economical consumption. The user may then switch to a profile selected for economy when reliability of energy source 30 increases. Similarly, in a mobile application, the user may choose profiles based on anticipated traffic or terrain choices, choosing between profiles optimized for performance, economy, reliability or other characteristics.
In another variation, the profiles are conditioned such that as operating or ambient variables change, the energy management system 44 automatically selects a new profile. In one example, the energy management system 44 selects a reliability profile after it detects intermittent or unreliable supply from the power grid. In another embodiment, the energy management system 44 changes profile if, while in an economy mode, it is unable to satisfy the refrigeration target. Similarly, in a mobile application example, the energy management system 44 automatically changes from economy to performance profiles (or modes) if it is unable to reach performance targets with the economy profile (or mode).
In another variation of the present embodiment, electrical load 54 comprises a thermal heating device (not shown) thermally coupled with refrigeration system 50. Energy management system 44 cycles fuel cell 60 and the thermal heating device to heat the refrigerant alternatively with excess heat from fuel cell 60 and the thermal heater. In one embodiment, the thermal heating device is an electric heating device. One skilled in the art, however, would easily recognize that any thermal heating device as known in the art can be used as the thermal heating device without departing from the present disclosure.
Fuel cell coupled refrigeration system 25 may be comprised in a building or a mobile application. A fuel cell coupled refrigeration system such as fuel cell coupled refrigeration system 25 may be comprised in an electric vehicle to provide range extension or comfort features as disclosed with reference to
A method to operate an integrated energy management system is also provided herein. In one embodiment, the method comprises generating electric energy and thermal energy with a fuel cell; storing at least a portion of the electric energy in an energy storage device; and driving a refrigeration cycle of a refrigeration system, at least sometimes, with energy provided by a first source of energy and with thermal energy from the fuel cell.
In one variation, the method further comprises changing an energy ratio between the energy provided by the first source of energy and the thermal energy responsive to a variable associated with the first source of energy. By changing the energy ratio, for example by increasing fuel cell energy production and reducing supply from the first source accordingly, or vice-versa, the overall energy cost consumed by the fuel cell coupled refrigeration system can be adjusted. As the cost of energy from the first source and the fuel cell vary, due to fluctuations in pricing or efficiency, for example, the energy ratio is adjusted accordingly to minimize cost relative to what cost would be if the ratio remained unchanged. In one example, the variable is the energy cost of the energy from the first source of energy, and the changing comprises reducing the energy ratio when the energy cost of the energy from the first source of energy increases. In another example, the variable is the energy cost of the energy from the first source of energy, and the changing comprises reducing the energy ratio when the energy cost of the energy from the first source of energy exceeds a predetermined high cost level. In a further example, the first source of energy is the energy storage device and the changing comprises reducing the energy ratio when a charge level of the energy storage device reaches a predetermined low charge level.
The present integrated energy management system is applicable in stationary and mobile applications. In one variation, the method further comprises operating a vehicle including a propulsion system, an integrated energy management system including the refrigeration system and the fuel cell, and changing, by the integrated energy management system, an energy ratio between the energy provided by the first source of energy and the thermal energy responsive to a variable associated with the first source of energy. In another variation, the method further comprises operating the refrigeration system and the fuel cell with an integrated energy management system to control a building temperature, and changing, by the integrated energy management system, an energy ratio between the energy provided by the first source of energy and the thermal energy responsive to a variable associated with the first source of energy.
The present integrated energy management system is also applicable, in stationary applications, to manage interaction with a power grid. In one variation, the first source of energy is an electrical power grid, and the method further comprises, by the integrated energy management system, reducing the ratio when an energy cost of the electrical energy from the electrical power grid exceeds a predetermined kilowatt-hour cost. In another variation, described in more detail below, the ratio is increased and excess power can then be sold to the power grid.
In another embodiment, the method comprises generating electric energy and thermal energy with a fuel cell; driving a refrigeration cycle of a refrigeration system, at least sometimes, with energy provided by a power grid and with thermal energy from the fuel cell; and, at other times, providing energy generated by the fuel cell to the power grid.
The integrated energy management system of the present disclosure is also applicable, in stationary applications, to manage interaction with a power grid. In one variation, the first source of energy is an electrical power grid, and the method further comprises, by the integrated energy management system, reducing the ratio when an energy cost of the electrical energy from the electrical power grid exceeds a predetermined kilowatt-hour cost. In another variation, described in more detail below, the ratio is increased and excess power can then be sold to the power grid.
The embodiments described herein above and below are illustrative. Additional embodiments include any combination of the variations and examples provided herein. Furthermore, while the energy control concepts have been described with reference to a refrigeration system, the concepts are also applicable to systems in which thermal energy from fuel cells may be used to substitute other forms of energy. More particularly, heat from a fuel cell is provided to an appliance to reduce consumption of electrical or gas energy. In one example, the appliance is a water heater. A heat exchanger is coupled to the water heater. When the fuel cell operates, heat from the fuel cell is transferred to the water in the water heater, directly or indirectly, by the heat exchanger. An exemplary integrated energy management system includes a fluid conduit fluidly coupling the fuel cell and the water heater. In one example, a water heater system is retrofitted by inserting a heat exchange loop in the existing hot water or water heater piping. Water is circulated through, and heated in, the heat exchange loop.
In another example, a heat exchange loop is physically coupled to the water heater to heat the water indirectly such that the heated water does not contact the heat exchange loop. In one embodiment of a cost-saving method, the integrated energy management system determines use and non-use periods based on historical trends or via user programming. The integrated energy management system controls the water temperature setpoint and prevents the water heater from heating water during non-use periods. Instead, the integrated energy management system directs fuel cell heat to the water heater to raise the water temperature to the target temperature just prior to the use period. Exemplary water heaters include electric and gas water heaters.
In another embodiment of a cost-saving method, the integrated energy management system directs grid supplied energy to an electric water heater to raise the water temperature to the target temperature just prior to the use period so long as the heating period coincides with a time when grid power is below a predetermined cost threshold. Otherwise, the integrated energy management system directs grid supplied energy to the water heater to raise the water temperature to the target temperature just prior to the time when grid power is above the predetermined cost threshold. In a further embodiment of a cost-saving method, the integrated energy management system reads an on/off status of electrical or thermal loads and adapts operation of the fuel cell accordingly.
The variations and examples provided above are also applicable to other thermal and electrical loads including, for example, dishwashers, clothes washers and dryers, and other household appliances. In a further variation, the integrated energy management system operates the appliances and the fuel cell to reduce charging and discharging cycles of the energy storage device.
Typically the fuel cell coupled refrigeration systems used in the integrated energy management systems of the present disclosure include heat driven refrigeration systems including absorption refrigeration and ejector refrigeration systems. Absorption refrigeration relies on the use of a liquid media (the “adsorbent”) such as water or lithium bromide that is capable of adsorbing a large amount of a refrigerant at low temperature and pressure. The refrigerant, for example ammonia, sulfur dioxide, water or a hydrocarbon as known in the art, passes through a condenser, an expansion valve and an evaporator in the same way as in the vapor-compression system described above. The compressor is replaced by an adsorber, a pump and a generator. As the refrigerant passes through the adsorber, it is adsorbed by the adsorbent and heat is released to the environment. The refrigerant and the adsorbent then enter a pump where the pressure of the mixture increases to the generator's pressure. The mixture is heated in the generator to separate the high-pressure refrigerant from the adsorbent.
Ejector refrigeration is a refrigeration cycle that also relies on heat input rather than mechanical means to drive the cycle. The ejector refrigeration system consists of two loops, the refrigeration loop and the power loop. In the power loop, the liquid refrigerant is pumped into a generator where an external heat source (e.g., fuel cell and/or electric heating device) vaporizes the refrigerant resulting in high pressure vapor called the primary fluid. The primary fluid expands through the ejector's nozzle and increases its velocity. This creates a vacuum in the refrigeration loop which draws in the vapor from the evaporator called the secondary fluid. The secondary fluid enters the ejector's diffuser where the velocity decreases and the pressure recovers. The secondary fluid goes through a condenser where heat is rejected to the environment. The condensed liquid is partly pumped back to the generator completing the power loop. The remaining condensed liquid is drawn into an expansion valve where the pressure is lowered. The liquid enters the evaporator where the low pressure created by the primary fluid allows the secondary fluid to evaporate at very low temperature and thereby provide the cooling effect. The secondary fluid then enters the ejector completing the refrigeration cycle.
In another embodiment, a fuel cell coupled refrigeration system coupled to an energy management system is provided. In the present embodiment, the fuel cell coupled refrigeration system is also coupled to an energy storage system, forming an integrated energy management system according to one embodiment of the present disclosure. The energy storage system generates heat as it charges. The amount of heat is related to the charging and discharging rate of the energy storage system. The power generation efficiency of fuel cells, on the other hand, is inversely related to power demand. Therefore, when the energy storage system is nearly fully discharged, charging generates a relatively large amount of heat and causes the fuel cell charging the energy storage system to operate inefficiently. At the same time, however, due to the high electrical energy demanded by charging, the fuel cell generates a large amount of heat. It has unexpectedly been found that as the fuel cell generates more power to charge the energy storage system, and thus, generates more heat, more effective cooling is generated by the fuel cell coupled refrigeration system. Advantageously, the cooling effect is generated at a time that it is most needed by the energy storage system.
In one variation, the energy management system prevents substantial discharge of the energy storage system. In another variation, the energy management system cycles the fuel cell's electrical power production at a predetermined rate to maintain a desired charge level, and reduces the cycling rate when the heat load demand increases above a predetermined heat demand level. Exemplary energy storage systems include energy storage devices such as batteries and capacitors. In a further variation, the energy storage system powers heating and cooling devices under low or no load conditions. In one example, the refrigeration system cools the energy storage devices. In another example, a heating device powered by the energy storage device drives the refrigeration system under no or low load conditions.
In further embodiments, the foregoing integrated energy management system is configured to extend the range of a vehicle and/or to provide comfort heating and cooling features. In even further embodiments, the foregoing integrated energy management system includes additional heating and cooling components to transfer thermal energy, or heat, to and from thermal loads.
Referring to
In one embodiment, an electric heating device 220 drives the refrigeration cycle when fuel cell 410 does not generate sufficient heat to do so. An additional unexpected advantage of coupling the electric heating device 220 and fuel cell 410 is that this allows decoupling of the thermal and electrical loads from the fuel cell. That is, when a separate electrical load provides electrical energy to electric heating device 220, heat produced from electric heating device 220 combines with heat produced by fuel cell 410 to drive the refrigeration cycle. When no separate electrical load is provided, however, electrical energy produced by fuel cell 410 can drive electric heating device 220, while heat produced from fuel cell 410 may still be used to drive the refrigeration cycle. It should be recognized that although described herein as an electric heating device, any other heating device as known in the refrigeration art can be used as a supplemental or alternative thermal energy source to the fuel cell for providing heat to drive the refrigeration cycle.
Generators 430 and 432 may be manufactured applying known heat exchange principles based on contact surface and fluid flow control to maximize the transfer of heat generated by fuel cell 410 to the fluid mixture circulating through the generator to cause the mixture to separate into its absorbent and refrigerant constituents. Another method of achieving heat transfer may be through boiling or phase change heat transfer in the generator 430, 432. Heat is transferred by heat transfer surface 416 from thermal load 402 and evaporated by the heat exchanger (evaporator) 152 thereby cooling thermal load 402. In one example, thermal load 402 is an electric vehicle battery compartment. In another example, thermal load 402 also includes a passenger cabin or compartment.
In one embodiment (not shown), fuel cell 410 also functions as a heat source for a heat load in addition to heating generators 430 and 432. A separate heat exchanger may be used to extract heat from fuel cell 410 for heating purposes. For example, in one embodiment, a dual purpose heat exchanger is provided configured with separate heat transfer conduits. One conduit extracts heat for use with refrigeration system 400 when refrigeration is required and another conduit extracts heat for heating of thermal load 402 when heating is required.
In one particularly suitable embodiment, the fuel cell comprises at least one proton exchange membrane (PEM) fuel cell designed to convert fuel such as pure hydrogen or a hydrogen-rich gas stream and an oxidant such as air in an electrochemical reaction that generates water vapor, electrical power and waste heat. Each cell includes a PEM membrane disposed between bipolar plates. Fuel cells may operate at different temperatures. Low-temperature PEM fuel cells operate between 60° C. and 80° C. High-temperature PEM fuel cells may operate between 95° C. and 180° C. and reject heat at about 150° C. Typically, absorption refrigeration can be achieved with heat at a temperature of about 60° C. Similarly, thermal compression or isochoric compression of typical air cooling system refrigerants can be achieved with heat at a temperature of about 60° C. The temperature differential between the rejected heat and the generator, which determines the heat transfer efficiency, also determines the size of the exchange surface required to transfer heat from a typical PEM fuel cell to a generator. Thus, the size of the generator to exchange heat with a low-temperature PEM fuel cell is much larger than the size of a generator used with a high-temperature PEM fuel cell to achieve the same heat transfer rate. Furthermore, at the temperatures at which the high-temperature PEM fuel cells operate, it is possible to transfer enough heat to run a compact generator utilizing the external surfaces of the fuel cells rather than having to circulate fluid through the bipolar plates. The ability to extract sufficient heat from the external surfaces simplifies and enables construction of an integrated fuel cell/generator structure.
In another embodiment, however, heat exchange may be improved by circulating fluid through the biopolar plates to increase the contact surface. This configuration enables the use of low-temperature PEM fuel cells with fuel cell coupled refrigeration systems as described in the present disclosure.
In another example, a second cooling conduit is built into the generator to construct a dual purpose generator. Independent flow control of the conduits permits the fuel cells to both heat a thermal load and refrigerate a second thermal load with the refrigeration system. In one variation, dual loop generators are used in stationary systems using lead-acid batteries to store energy generated by the fuel cells. Because temperature control can extend the life of lead-acid batteries, heating and cooling to maintain a desired temperature within a narrow band is desirable and achievable with a dual purpose generator. In another variation, described with reference to
Referring to
In one embodiment, an integrated energy management system is configured to control the temperature of one or more compartments (not shown). When heating is desired, the fuel cell coupled refrigeration system 100 transfers heat from fuel cell 410 to the compartments.
In some embodiments, the fuel cell coupled refrigeration systems include auxiliary cooling systems. Embodiments of fuel cell coupled refrigeration systems including auxiliary cooling systems according to the disclosure are described with reference to
For example, in an electric vehicle application, pump 452 is powered by an energy storage system (not shown) which is in turn powered by fuel cell 410. A refrigerant is circulated in a cooling loop through auxiliary cooling system 446 to cool, at least partially, fuel cell 410. In one embodiment, generator 430 and heat exchanger 444 are integrated in a dual purpose generator. In an alternative embodiment, separate heat exchange components are independently coupled to the fuel cell 410. If the refrigeration system 100 is not in operation, auxiliary cooling system 446 cools fuel cell 410. If some refrigeration is desired, absorption refrigeration system 400 and auxiliary cooling system 446 may be selectively operated by an energy management system to maximize the efficiency of the fuel cell coupled refrigeration system 100. In a further embodiment, generator 430 also includes heating device 220.
In
Referring to
In a variation thereof (not shown), an auxiliary cooling system is provided as described with reference to
In one variation, electric heating device 700 is provided as an alternative/supplemental heat source to drive the refrigeration cycle of ejector refrigeration system 670. In one example, heating device 700 and fuel cell 610 are cycled to alternatively drive the refrigeration cycle, at least sometimes. In another example, heating device 700 and fuel cell 610 are operated concurrently, at least sometimes, to drive the refrigeration cycle. It should be recognized that by having the electric heating device 700, the fuel cell power output and heat generation can be decoupled from the heating load and the electrical load as described above, enabling greater operational flexibility.
In other embodiments of an integrated energy management system including a fuel cell coupled refrigeration system, as shown in
In yet another embodiment, the pressure is increased by expanding steam (not shown) generated by fuel cell 314 to compress the refrigerant. As the steam increases in a constrained space, the refrigerant is compressed and its pressure increases. Increasing the pressure reduces an energy requirement of compressor 310. Thus, for the same amount of heating or cooling demanded of refrigeration system 300, less electrical energy 312 is consumed as a result of the application of thermal energy from fuel cell 314 to refrigeration system 300. In one embodiment, fuel cell 314 is operated between 60° C. and 180° C. More particularly, in one embodiment, a low temperature PEM fuel cell is operated between 60° C. and 80° C. In another embodiment, an intermediate temperature PEM fuel cell is operated between 90° C. and 150° C. In yet another embodiment, a high temperature PEM fuel cell is operated between 100° C. and 180° C.
In one suitable embodiment, a method according to the disclosure includes retrofitting a vapor-compression refrigeration system, such as system 300, by adding generator 316 and fuel cell 314 to transfer excess heat from the fuel cell 314 to the refrigerant.
Referring to
As noted above, alternative/supplemental energy sources may be included in the fuel cell coupled refrigeration systems. Referring to
In particularly suitable embodiments, fuel cell 110 is electrically coupled in parallel with battery cell stack 162 and load 104. In this configuration, fuel cell 110 can participate in powering the electrical load 104 in conjunction with battery system 160. In cases where load 104 is lower than fuel cell 110 power output, fuel cell 110 can recharge battery cell stack 162 while providing power to load 104.
In the present embodiment, heat exchanger 152 is configured to receive heat from battery system 160. Refrigeration system 150 further includes a fluid supply line 154 fluidly coupled to inlet 122 and a fluid return line 156 fluidly coupled to discharge outlet 124. A primary fluid circulates through refrigeration system 150, fluid supply line 152, fluid conduit 120 and fluid return line 156 driven by a fluid pump (not shown) or by density changes caused by temperature variations in the refrigerant. As the primary fluid passes through fluid conduit 120 it receives heat from fuel cell 110 and then refrigeration system 150 discharges the heat to the environment or to a heat load. The heat received by refrigeration system 150 drives its cooling cycle as explained above and below with reference to
In another variation of the present embodiment, the primary fluid is thermally coupled to an electric heating device 200 having a fluid conduit 203 between an inlet 202 and a discharge outlet 204. In one example, heating device 200 comprises a plurality of electric heating bands 206 configured to heat fluid conduit 203 and fluid passing therethrough. Heating device 200 is powered by power lines 175 and 176 which are supplied power by battery cell stack 162 of battery system 160 or directly by the fuel cell. A switching device 210 is controlled by energy management system 178 with a control signal supplied via a signal line 192 to engage or disengage heating device 200. Exemplary switching devices include relays and contactors.
As explained further below with reference to
The no-load charge threshold can depend on application specific variables. Thus, multiple conditional no load charge thresholds may be applicable under varying conditions. In one example, after the batteries are sufficiently charged the fuel cell system is disengaged and the heating device is engaged to keep the refrigeration system working, to cool the batteries for example. Once the batteries reach a no-load charge threshold, the fuel cell system re-engages to charge the batteries, the heating device disengages, and the fuel cell heat drives the refrigeration cycle. The fuel cell system and the heating device may cycle on and off as described herein for other purposes as well.
Battery system 160 includes a battery cell stack 162 and a battery management system (BMS) 166. Battery management system 166 communicates via a demand signal on signal line 181, providing sufficient information to enable energy management system 178 to engage fuel cell 100 at an appropriate power level to charge battery cell stack 162. In one variation, BMS 166 determines, based on historical data and present voltage, a required charge rate and communicates the required charge rate and voltage to energy management system 178 via the demand signal. In another variation, energy management system 178 determines the charge rate based on a voltage signal on demand line 181. In a further variation, energy management system 178 determines the charge rate based on a voltage signal on demand line 181 and predictive information received on signal line 182 or any other signal lines as described below. Based on the required charge information, FMS 140 calculates how much current is required given the voltage output by fuel cell 110 and converts the voltage output to substantially match the present voltage of battery cell stack 162. FMS 140 adapts the DC/DC conversion ratio as the present voltage increases during charging. BMS 166 may include a pre-charge circuit suitable to receive electric energy from an external source. The functionality of the system has been described with reference to FMS 140, BMS 166 and energy management system 178 for simplicity, but the present disclosure is not to be construed as requiring three control components. The same functionality can be achieved with a single control component or with a distributed control system in which the control logic is even more distributed than in the disclosed embodiment. The control logic can be embodied in software, in hardware and in a hybrid system comprising software and hardware. Demand and control lines are described in singular form for simplicity. Demand and control lines may comprise one or more conductors transmitting one or more signals each. In one example, demand and/or control lines comprise serial communication lines communicating a variety of data types such as data representative of voltage, current, timing, faults and errors. In another example, demand and/or control lines comprise control voltages or currents, for example 0-10 volts or 4-20 milliamps, as is know in the art of control systems. The control logic may also be integrated with a control device controlling the overall operation of a mobile or stationary system coupled to the integrated energy management system.
In a further embodiment, the integrated energy management system is comprised in an electric vehicle. The electric vehicle comprises an electric propulsion system and the integrated energy management system. Exemplary propulsion systems comprise wheels or propellers driven by one or more electric motors. Exemplary motors include regenerating motors. The integrated energy management system includes a fuel cell coupled refrigeration system, such as shown in
An embodiment of an integrated energy management system including fuel cell coupled refrigeration system as in
Energy management system 178 further comprises a processing device 242, a memory device 244, and imbedded in memory device 244, an application 248 including a plurality of processing instructions executable by processing device 242 to engage and disengage the heating and cooling sources, the integrated energy management system and other components of electric vehicle 300. Referring to
Unless otherwise expressly stated in connection with a specific use thereof, the term “memory device” includes any variation of electronic circuits in which processing instructions executable by a processing device may be embedded unless otherwise expressly stated in connection with the specific use of the term. For example, a memory device includes read only memory, random access memory, a field programmable gate array, a hard-drive, a disk, flash memory, and any combinations thereof, whether physically or electronically coupled. Similarly, a processing device includes, for example, a central processing unit, a math processing unit, a video processing unit, a plurality of processors on a common integrated circuit, and a plurality of processors operating in concert, whether physically or electronically coupled. Furthermore and in a similar manner, in the context of a processing device, the term “application” includes a single application, a plurality of applications, one or more programs or subroutines, software, firmware, and any variations thereof suitable to execute instruction sequences with a processing device.
As described above, an integrated energy management system in a mobile application may be enhanced with predictive range extension and/or comfort features. In one embodiment according to the disclosure, a plurality of profiles is obtained corresponding to a plurality of modes of operation. In one example, the integrated energy management system includes an algorithm programmed to operate so as to optimize particular profiles. Referring to
Referring to
Referring to
While the present disclosure has been described as having an exemplary design, the present disclosure may be further modified within the spirit and scope of this disclosure. For example, additional predictive features may be incorporated. In a method for a mobile application, for example, acceleration, passing and stopping profiles are defined for different environments such a city, highway, mountain environments based on vehicle displacement, acceleration and velocity. The integrated energy management system compares present variables to the profiles to select a profile and then utilizes the profile and other variables to optimize operation and efficiency of the vehicle. Exemplary other variables include the voltage of the batteries, desired cabin temperature, ambient temperature, and other operating parameters of the vehicle. In one example, the profiles include variable thresholds. The integrated energy management system compares profile thresholds to present values of the corresponding variables and switches profiles when the present value indicates that further operation according to the profile in place will cause a violation of a threshold. Then, the integrated energy management system switches profiles to prevent such violation.
In another example, a fuel cell coupled refrigeration system is operated based on profiles in a stationary application. Exemplary profiles are based on time of day, loads schedules, seasonal weather patterns, and schedules such as work and travel schedules. Thus, while the environment in which the refrigeration system is used, and the type of refrigeration system, define the operating variables of the system, operational control of the coupled fuel cell provides flexibility to optimize operation of the integrated energy management system at different times and for different reasons. This application is intended to cover any variations, uses, or adaptations of the disclosure using its general principles. Further, this application is intended to cover such departures from the present disclosure as come within known or customary practice in the art to which this disclosure pertains.
In view of the above, it will be seen that the several advantages of the disclosure are achieved and other advantageous results attained. As various changes could be made in the above systems and methods without departing from the scope of the disclosure, it is intended that all matter contained in the above description and shown in the accompanying drawings shall be interpreted as illustrative and not in a limiting sense.
When introducing elements of the present disclosure or the various versions, embodiment(s) or aspects thereof, the articles “a”, “an”, “the” and “said” are intended to mean that there are one or more of the elements. The terms “comprising”, “including” and “having” are intended to be inclusive and mean that there may be additional elements other than the listed elements.
The present application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/492,318 filed on Jun. 1, 2011, entitled “Fuel Cell Coupled Refrigeration System for Power, Heating and Cooling Applications”, the entire disclosure of which is expressly incorporated by reference herein.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61492318 | Jun 2011 | US |