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"We wanted to put one in and see how well it worked,"
says Ed Lewis Sr., deputy director of the governor's
Office of Energy Management and Conservation (OEMC) for the
State of Colorado. "Essentially, we are demonstrating
this fuel cell for the public and for the businesses of Colorado."
The Colorado OEMC is committed to demonstrating emerging
energy technologies as a way of promoting future energy efficiency,
a cleaner environment, and energy savings. "Through our
demonstrations, these technologies are available for the public
to see and learn about firsthand," says Megan Castle,
public information officer of the OEMC. "Our aim is to
showcase these technologies so that Coloradoans can decide
if these are technologies they can use to improve their lives
or businesses."
This fuel cell is not only the first one to be installed
in a Colorado fire station, but it's the first one in
the state that successfully powered any type of business facility.
"There have been others in the state that have been used
in labs or tried in different places," shares Lewis,
"but they haven't panned out in a direct application
where people are working in the building and getting some
of their electricity or all of their hot water, like in this
case."
For the 22 months this particular fuel cell has been running
and supplying power, its performance has been nothing short
of splendid. "It's exceeded our expectations in
terms of reliability for this amount of time," says Lewis.
"We didn't think it would last this long without
a lot of repair work, and we thought we'd see more problems.
But it's actually doing very well."
Waiting for the
Right One
The OEMC had been following up on fuel
cells for a few years before this installation. However, before
it could actually demonstrate one, it had to wait until it
found a fuel cell that was developed enough for such an exhibition.
"We had to wait until enough work and tests had been
done on them in the lab. And in some very early adopters applications
we had to decide whether it was worthwhile to take them out
in front of the public. We wanted it to last, at minimum,
long enough to collect representative data," says Lewis.
So in the late winter/spring of 2001 the OEMC was confident
the energy industry had reached this point and it put out
a solicitation. It went to large utilities in large Colorado
cities that had access to a site that was highly visible to
the public. The winners of the solicitation were the City
and County of Denver and Xcel Energy, the largest utility
company in Colorado. Finding a fuel cell manufacturer whose
product was ready to be tested and who was willing to warranty
it in any way, however, proved to be a challenge. "At
that point in time, most of the manufacturers were in a situation
where they didn't know enough about the fuel cells themselves,"
Lewis says. Plug Power Inc. was the only manufacturer the
OEMC talked to that was confident its technology would work,
so the OEMC went with Plug Power's GenSys 5C unit.
"Plug Power already had a few fuel cells out there in
limited trials," Lewis says. "And it was quite a
few of them and they were doing rather well. So we expected
their equipment to continue to operate in that manner."
To install the fuel cell and coordinate the demonstration
at the fire station, the OEMC worked in partnership with the
City and County of Denver, Altair Energy, Xcel Energy, Alpha
Technologies, and obviously the City and County of Denver
Fire Station and Plug Power. The OEMC funded all of the purchase
cost of the fuel cell itself while the other partners collectively
contributed resources, expertise, assistance, and additional
funding for the installation, operation, and maintenance of
the system.
Steps Along the
Way
Believing that a small commercial building
was the best choice for maximizing the fuel cell's exposure
to the public, the Washington Park Fire Station was chosen
for a long-term demonstration. As a government building, the
station is very visible to the public, and the fact that it's
located right next to Washington Parkone of Colorado's
busiest parks that attracts thousands of visitors a daywas
just the icing on the cake.
Coming to this decision, however, wasn't an easy task.
For one, each partner, depending on the kind of company or
organization it was, had its own ideas as to what it wanted
to accomplish with the fuel cell. "And because the fire
station is right at the side of a park," says Brian Davenport,
market engagement manager with Plug Power who acted as program
manager on this project, "there was some concern about
putting the system on the park, or between the fire station
and the park, because it would be so near a green space. So
we looked around the site to find the best spot and ended
up putting it on the east side of the fire station, between
the fire station and the street, in the fire station parking
lot."
The next step was the permitting and approval process with
the city and authorities in the area. This process was to
ensure that the installation design was solid and safe, and
wouldn't affect the fire station or its staff negatively
in any way. "Since the city was intimately involved with
this project, we went through all the electrical and mechanical
city inspectors there," says Davenport. "We had
to get approval for the siting of it, and that was in conjunction
with the Parks and Recreation Department, the Fire Department,
and the city officials. Then we had to submit a drawing package
to the inspectors, which was reviewed by their planning review
team." Since the hookups for this fuel cell werein
terms of the fluid and electrical systemsfairly standard,
this phase of the process went rather smoothly.
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After all the red tape was worked through, it was time to
begin constructing the site. Since fuel cells have rarely
been installed in facilities before, site preparation is almost
always required. However, fuel cell preparation is not any
different from what is necessary for the installation of any
other major type of appliance. "Since fuel cells are
new products," says Davenport, "we put this one
in a location where there'd never been a piece of equipment
before. We needed to run the piping and the conduit and put
the foundation in place." When that was completed, Plug
Power was ready to drop the system in place and turn it on.
The final hookups to the system and the actual process of
turning it on is called the commissioning. "Part of commissioning
phase is filling the unit up with fluids, doing hookups, and
going through the startup procedure," elaborates Rick
Holz, chief engineer of Altair Energy, which provided installation
services. "Startup with this particular unit is fairly
automatic. You have to do some initial safety checks, such
as checking your gas pressures and fluid levels and such,
and then with the software they've provided it easily
goes into startup mode."
Of all the phases of installation, the purely technical oneslike
site selection, preparation, startup, and commissioningtook
the shortest amount of time, roughly six weeks total. Site
selection and design review, however, took quite a bit longer.
"Most of that time was just trying to get all the parties
involved at one place at the same time," Holz notes.
A Primer on Fuel
Cells
Even though fuel cells use fossil fuel,
their valuable advantage is that they put out very low emissions.
This is because they convert fuel to energy through an electromechanical
(chemical) process as opposed to combusting fuel. A fuel cell
converts the chemical energy from fuel directly into electricity
and heat. This process breaks down into three stages: (1)
A reformer takes the gas and reforms it, and what comes out
is straight hydrogen; (2) the hydrogen goes into the fuel
cell stack where a chemical process occurs that generates
electricity; and (3) this electricity then goes into a converter
that converts DC power to AC power to make it more adaptable
for plugging into the wall.
The fire station's fuel cell is a 5-kW unit, which is
approximately the average amount of peak demand for an average-sized
house. As long as the grid is up and running and the fuel
cell is operating at full capacity, the grid doesn't
have to supply that amount of energy. The fuel cell runs at
about 100 degrees, which is on the low side when compared
to most fuel cells, and it supplies all the hot water for
the fire station and about a third of the electricity.
There exist a variety of different fuel cells such as phosphoric
acid fuel cells, solid oxide fuel cells, proton exchange membrane
fuel cells, and ceramic fuel cells. These different types
are powered by propane, natural gas, biogas, and hydrogen,
among other sources of power. Many are currently being used
by a variety of businesses today. For instance, a credit card
company in Omaha, NE, has been using phosphoric acid fuel
cells for a few years now. Two are in use at Four Times Square
in New York, and the military is also using them at various
facilities, testing them out on such systems as power locomotives
and tanks. Long Island Power has had over 100 fuel cells in
use that were directly tied into its grid.
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"The reason they use them is because they're very reliable
and can back up the grid," Lewis says, "because
if the grid goes down they could lose all kinds of information.
There's a phosphoric acid fuel cell in the police station
in Central Park, and when we had that big blackout last year
in the northeast, it was up during the power outage and provided
critical information to other stations in the New York area."
Fuel cells supply energy in several ways. One application
is to supplement an existing grid and alleviate a percentage
of the energy supplied by the grid. Fuel cells can also back
up critical systems should a grid go down, or supply energy
instead of a grid. Because the fire station's fuel cell
supplements the gridas opposed to working instead of
itthe grid must be on for the fuel cell to operate.
"The fuel cell is supplying some portion of energy, and
whatever it can make, the grid does not supply that portion.
If the fuel cell goes down and the grid begins operating at
100% for everything in the building, nobody notices anything
different. The lights don't even flicker," Lewis
says.
ReliabilityToday
and Tomorrow
"Over the 22 months it's been
running," Lewis says, "we've had some downtimes.
But in general it's running between 70% and 80% of the time,
which is really quite good for a beta unit. There have even
been several months where it's run at 100%. Eventually fuel
cells should be so reliable that they'll be more reliable
than the grid."
A typical electrical grid operates at what is called four
9's reliability, which means 0.9999% of the time. When
fuel cells are fully developed and have reached their peak,
however, they are projected to run at a reliability rate of
seven 9s, meaning 0.9999999% of time.
One of the goals fuel cell designers are working toward is
to find parts that last longer. For instance, the fuel cell
stack in a proton exchange fuel cell is platinum-based. It's
very expensive and can be easily damaged by contaminants produced
during the reforming process, such as carbon dioxide and carbon
monoxide.
"What happens with this fuel cell," begins Lewis,
"is that you put in some kind of fuel. The first thing
that fuel encounters is the fuel cell's reformer. The
reformer strips off the hydrogen, which is what you use to
make the electricity. The rest of the carbon and oxygen in
there need to go somewhere, and they need to be kept away
from the stack. So the carbon compounds are vented."
However, the fuel cell stack is inevitably exposed to a small
amount of the contaminants anyway, which wears it down over
time.
So the goal of fuel cell designers is to find cheaper, less
sensitive materials to use for the fuel stack to create more
economically feasible fuel cells. The ultimate goal, however,
is to create more models that run on hydrogen only. Fuel cells
that do this produce only clean water and heat as byproducts.
"There are a lot of parts that still need to be redesigned
to last longer and be more miniaturized," says Lewis.
"But eventually, if we can find a way to make hydrogen
cheaply, we won't even have to worry about the reformer
anymore."
And Economically
Speaking
Of the money contributed by the
OEMC for the fire station fuel cell, none came from the state.
Instead it was supplied by federal sources, mostly by the
US Department of Energy. "The OEMC uses that money to
help people understand and realize the value of energy efficiency,
energy conservation, and new emerging energy technologies
so as to help offset energy costs and lessen the use of petroleum
fuels," says Lewis.
When the GenSys fuel cell was purchased, it cost $70,000
with a warranty of approximately $25,000. Purchased for testing
and public exposure purposes, it was not intended to be a
money-saver for the fire station. "You can go out and
buy a reciprocating enginebased generator to back up
your facility and that will cost you about $1.00 a watt,"
says Lewis. "This fuel cell right now, if you look at
what we paid for a 5-kilowatt unit, was at that point in time
$14.00 per watt. Now it's down to roughly $10.00 a watt
or so compared to solar, which would cost you about $6.00
to $11.00 a watt installed, and windmill, which would cost
you $3.25 a watt." Prices for fuel cells, however, have
been steadily decreasing each year.
So people are using fuel cells now for non-economical reasons.
Because they're so new, many people are interested in
learning more about how and why they are on the cutting edge
of distributed energy equipment. Then there are those who
see alternative fuel systems as part of their long-term plan
and vision, and they want to see how well they incorporate
into their own current structure. In a sense, fuel cells now
are largely an investment in potential.
A Smooth Ride
Both
Plug Power's and OEMC's technical crews were very pleased
with how smoothly the installation process went. They faced
no major problems and no surprises, and problems they did
come across were no more difficult than would be normally
expected in any equipment installation or remodel. "We
had a couple of gas leaks and water leaks, things like that,"
says Plug Power's Davenport, "but they were just a matter
of some people not having tightened down some things. They
had nothing to do with the fuel cell itself."
The biggest challenge faced throughout the entire process
was the fact that many people involved in the installation
were not familiar with what a fuel cell is. And for good reasonthere
aren't many out there. But once people were educated,
the installation process was, in the words of Davenport, "a
breeze."
As far as risks to the user are concerned, there aren't
any more with a fuel cell than there are with other major
appliances, such as a water heater or furnace. "There's
a basic set of risks that come with each appliance,"
says Davenport, "but there are no special characteristics
of a fuel cell that bring any unique risks. In fact, they
may even be safer than some of the other appliances because
they're not combusting the gasit's a chemical
reaction. And the combustion has certain risks that an electrochemical
process doesn't."
So what kind of impact did the installation have on the fire
station? "It didn't affect the functioning of our
business," says Lieutenant Phil Champagne, public information
officer for the Denver Fire Department. "They worked
very well with us. There was some impact, but it was no more
than if they were doing a remodeling project. They cut a lot
of pipes, and it was a little bit of an inconvenience, but
they were very gracious and it worked out well. The whole
process took about eight to ten weeks."
"Any interruptions were minimal," concurs Altair
Energy's Holz. "And they were standard. The station
was probably without hot water for an hour or sothey
don't use hot water continuously anywayso they
probably didn't even notice it."
With the fuel cell in place, there is no noticeable difference
in the fire station's current operations either. Besides
the fact that it can be seen sitting outside the station,
and that at times it has a very low hum produced by a fan
(which is not even as loud as an air conditioner), the system
is more or less transparent to the employees. "And that's
the way it's designed to be," Davenport says, "so
the end user doesn't really care where the power is coming
from, as long as they have power."
A Bright Future
Because
fuel cells are a new technology that people aren't used to
yet, there's a long list of issues that need to be touched
on each time one is installed. Many electricians and mechanical
engineers aren't even familiar with fuel cells yet, and they
need to understand what they are and how they work before
they can install one. "It's not like looking at a refrigerator
where they know the ins and outs of it," says Cynthia
Mahoney White, the public relations and marketing spokesperson
at Plug Power. "This is brand new technology. Because
people aren't yet aware of fuel cells, installation teams
need a certain amount of prep work before people can be comfortable
and understand that it's safe installation."
"With the fuel cell industry being so young and new,"
says Davenport, "every time we go into a project we're
dealing with new people who haven't really dealt with
a fuel cell before. We're at the point in the industry
now where the people who are installing these systems are
really trying to push this technology, so there's a kind
of excitement and enthusiasm with the kinds of organizations
involved. And it's just exciting to be a part of it."
Los Angeles-based journalist AMY SORKIN
specializes in marketing communications.
DE - January/February
2005
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