Techno-Economic Analysis of Active and Passive Liquid Hydrogen Storage Systems.
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Date
2025-09-01
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Saudi Digital Library
Abstract
Green hydrogen is increasingly recognized as an important part of the renewable energy
transition. It provides a clean and flexible energy source that can help replace fossil fuels in
sectors that are hard to decarbonize. Effective storage is crucial for energy security and economic
feasibility, especially in local wind-to-hydrogen hubs. Liquid hydrogen (LH₂) is a promising option
due to its high volumetric density, but its very low boiling point of -253 °C creates challenges such
as boil-off and high energy use. Comparing different LH₂ storage methods is necessary to guide
the development of future hydrogen hubs.
This study looked at the technical and economic trade-offs between active and passive LH₂
storage systems. For 30 days, data from engineering standards and published studies were used
to estimate boil-off rates, cryocooler performance, and costs. In a 5,000 kg tank, the passive
system with advanced multilayer insulation lost 15 kg of hydrogen (0.01%), while the active
system used about 384 kWh of electricity but prevented boil-off. These results show the balance
between hydrogen loss in passive storage and energy use in active storage.
A sensitivity analysis was done to see how scaling and market conditions affect the results. When
the storage size increased to 195,000 kg, the passive system lost about 585 kg of hydrogen in 30
days, and the active system's energy use went up to over 15,000 kWh. The cost comparison
changed with different price assumptions: passive storage was cheaper at current hydrogen
prices (£4.6/kg) but less attractive as prices neared £10/kg. Active storage became more
competitive when electricity prices dropped to £0.05–0.10/kWh, which is possible in areas with
lots of renewable energy. These findings suggest that neither system is always better; the best
choice depends on scale, prices, and how the storage will be used.
Future research should include not just operating costs but also capital costs, maintenance, and
factors like cryocooler servicing and insulation wear. It is also important to model how storage
works across different seasons. Covering these areas will help techno-economic studies give a
fuller view of hydrogen storage and support the creation of reliable and affordable local hydrogen
hubs.
Description
My dissertation conducts a techno-economic comparison of passive and active liquid hydrogen (LH₂) storage systems within the context of renewable wind-to-hydrogen energy hubs. It evaluates boil-off losses, energy demand, and cost implications for each system, showing that passive storage minimizes energy use while active storage eliminates hydrogen loss through continuous cryogenic cooling. The study concludes that the optimal storage approach depends on scale, hydrogen and electricity prices, and operational priorities, guiding future hydrogen hub development.
Keywords
Hydrogen Infrastructure, Active and Passive Cryogenic Systems, Techno-Economic Analysis, Hydrogen Boil-off, Cryocooler Performance, Multilayer Insulation (MLI), Zero-Boil-Off (ZBO) Storage, Renewable Energy Hubs
Citation
Harvard
