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Scaling-up Balance of Plant components for efficient high power heavy duty applications

 

This topic aims at development and validation of the new generation of high-power BoP components sized for ≥250 kW heavy duty fuel cell systems containing one single fuel cell stack or multiples of stacks. The developed BoP components should be compatible with upscaling to multi-MW propulsion systems. The following components and sub-system are of high relevance:

  • Air humidifiers are considered a component that contributes to improving the gravimetric power index, if the component becomes more integrated and more light weight.
  • Anode gas recirculation components enable high utilisation of hydrogen and are therefore to be developed and optimised for the aforementioned requirements. The possibilities of fuel cell reconditioning measures are to be considered.
  • To reliably operate fuel cell drivetrains gas sensors need to measure mass flow, humidity, temperature, pressure and gas compositions accurately. These sensors need to be operational under changing environmental conditions and need to be robust against gas impurities and water phase.

Proposals are expected to build on demonstration-level high power installations or pre-study designs by addressing the identified knowledge gaps and scaling up and improving key BoP components suitable for high power HD applications.

Increasing the fuel cell system gravimetric power index above 2.5 kW/kg requires the development of light weight and compact BoP components as well as novel and innovative system architectures. In particular, proposals should address the following:

  • Re-design of BoP component(s) and enhanced system architectures for a minimum of 250 kW PEM fuel cell platform compatible with reaching the multi-MW scale and with end-user requirements (system power output, voltage level, weight, volume …);
  • Investigations to simplify architectures by e.g. removing components such as gas sensors, the anode gas recirculation machine, water separators, the humidifier bypass and/or the humidifier itself;
  • Analyses of the trade-offs between system efficiency, operational bandwidth and system complexity for waste heat recovery from fuel cell system components e.g. stack(s), power electronics and motors;
  • Design and validation of the electric power supply architecture for BoP components used for heavy duty fuel cell systems containing one single fuel cell stack or multiples of stacks;
  • Design and validation of the thermal integration of the waste heat management of the BoP components into the overall thermal system of the heavy-duty fuel cell system;
  • Evaluation of auxiliary functions performed by the up-scaled BoP components e.g. for cold start and fuel cell stack reconditioning operations;
  • Assessments to ensure a scalable, modular and multi modal product family that allows the usage in a wide range of HD applications (aviation, maritime, rail and road transport);
  • Development, testing and validation of selected, up-scaled BoP components (PEMFC stack may be emulated);
  • Implementation and testing of control strategies to validate the improved system performance, efficiency and reliability.

Original equipment manufacturers (OEMs), end users and research institutes should indicate how product relevant R&D activities lead to improved components and achieve the required system level functionality.

HORIZON-JTI-CLEANH2-2024-03-01 and HORIZON-JTI-CLEANH2-2024-03-02 topics are highly complementary; liaison between successful proposals in these two topics is expected to ensure complementarity, leverage synergies and avoid duplication of efforts. Applicants should demonstrate how this will be achieved (e.g. by sharing members of the respective advisory boards, by organizing regular exchanges).

Proposals are encouraged to explore synergies with the Zero Emission Waterborne Transport (ZEWT) Partnership and 2ZERO Partnership as the outputs of the projects supported under this topic have the potential to be of direct interest to companies in the road and port-maritime sector (e.g. trucks, pilot boats, cargo port handling equipment, etc).

Proposals should demonstrate how they go beyond the ambition of FASTERH2, BRAVA, SMR-ACAP and other relevant European projects and be complementary to them.

For additional elements applicable to all topics please refer to section 2.2.3.2.

Activities are expected to start at TRL 3 and achieve TRL 5 by the end of the project - see General Annex B.

The JU estimates that an EU contribution of maximum EUR 4.00 million would allow these outcomes to be addressed appropriately.

The conditions related to this topic are provided in the chapter 2.2.3.2 of the Clean Hydrogen JU 2024 Annual Work Plan and in the General Annexes to the Horizon Europe Work Programme 2023–2024 which apply mutatis mutandis.

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