OCSYSYApr 28

Reconfiguring flexibility in renewable power-to-ammonia systems using molten-salt thermal energy storage in the ammonia synthesis loop: A coordinated electro-hydrogen-thermal scheduling approach

arXiv:2604.2519243.1h-index: 15
Predicted impact top 24% in OC · last 90 daysOriginality Incremental advance
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For renewable power-to-ammonia systems, this work addresses thermal instability and flexibility limitations, offering a cost-effective alternative to large battery storage.

This study integrates molten-salt thermal energy storage into the ammonia synthesis loop of renewable power-to-ammonia systems to decouple hydrogen supply fluctuations from reactor thermal dynamics. A coordinated scheduling framework achieves near-equivalent performance to large-battery systems with lower investment, avoiding reactor start-up/shutdown and improving net revenue under variable renewable conditions.

In renewable power-to-ammonia (ReP2A) systems, the intermittency of wind and solar generation propagates through electrolytic hydrogen production and induces thermal instability in the ammonia synthesis reactor (ASR). The resulting temperature cycling accelerates fatigue and shortens service life, while reactor thermal inertia limits flexible start-up, shutdown, and load adjustment. To address this issue, this study integrates molten-salt thermal energy storage (MS-TES) into the Haber-Bosch synthesis loop and develops a coordinated electro-hydrogen-thermal scheduling framework. MS-TES decouples hydrogen supply fluctuations from reactor thermal dynamics by enabling hot standby operation and sustained thermal support during start-up and low-load conditions. A state-space model is established to capture the thermal dynamics of the ASR and MS-TES. Based on this model, an optimal scheduling program coordinates ammonia synthesis operation with hydrogen production, battery energy storage (BES), and hydrogen storage (HS). The problem is formulated as a mixed-integer linear program (MILP) and extended with information gap decision theory (IGDT) to address renewable uncertainty. Case studies based on an industrial-scale project in northern China show that MS-TES enhances reactor thermal stability and system-level flexibility, while diminishing the marginal benefit of large BES capacity. As a result, a configuration combining small BES, HS, and MS-TES achieves near-equivalent performance to large-BES systems, with lower investment and improved economic returns. Year-round simulations further show that MS-TES avoids ASR start-up and shutdown and delivers consistently higher net revenue under variable renewable conditions.

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