| Hauptseite > Publikationsdatenbank > Cost-Optimal Power-to-Methanol: Flexible Operation or Intermediate Storage? |
| Preprint | FZJ-2024-01053 |
; ;
2023
arXiv
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Please use a persistent id in citations: doi:10.48550/ARXIV.2305.18338 doi:10.34734/FZJ-2024-01053
Abstract: The synthesis of methanol from captured carbon dioxide and green hydrogen could be a promising replacement for the current fossil-based production. The major energy input and cost driver for such a process is the electricity for hydrogen production. Time-variable electricity cost or availability thus motivates flexible operation. However, it is unclear if each unit of the process should be operated flexibly, and if storage of electricity or hydrogen reduces the methanol production cost. To answer these questions, we modeled a Power-to-Methanol plant with batteries and hydrogen storage. Using this model, we solved a combined design and scheduling optimization problem, which provides the optimal size of the units of the plant and their optimal (quasi-stationary) operation. The annualized cost of methanol was minimized for a grid-connected and a stand-alone case study. The optimization results confirm that storage, especially hydrogen storage, is particularly beneficial when the electricity price is high and highly fluctuating. Irrespective of the presence of storage, the whole Power-to-Methanol plant should be operated flexibly: even moderate flexibility of the methanol synthesis unit significantly reduces the production cost.
Keyword(s): Optimization and Control (math.OC) ; FOS: Mathematics
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