Abstract

Design of the heat exchanger in a metal hydride based hydrogen storage system influences the storage capacity, gravimetric hydrogen storage density, and refueling time for automotive on-board hydrogen storage systems. The choice of a storage bed design incorporating the heat exchanger and the corresponding geometrical design parameters is not obvious. A systematic study is presented to optimize the heat exchanger design using computational fluid dynamics (CFD) modeling. Three different shell and tube heat exchanger designs are chosen. In the first design, metal hydride is present in the shell and heat transfer fluid flows through straight parallel cooling tubes placed inside the bed. The cooling tubes are interconnected by conducting fins. In the second design, heat transfer fluid flows through helical tubes in the bed. The helical tube design permits use of a specific maximum distance between the metal hydride and the coolant for removing heat during refueling. In the third design, the metal hydride is present in the tubes and the fluid flows through the shell. An automated tool is generated using COMSOL-MATLAB integration to arrive at the optimal geometric parameters for each design type. Using sodium alanate as the reference storage material, the relative merits of each design are analyzed and a comparison of the gravimetric and volumetric hydrogen storage densities for the three designs is presented.

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