A combined cycle hydrogen power plant is a power plant that uses hydrogen in a combined cycle power plant. A green hydrogen combined cycle power plant is only about 40% efficient, after electrolysis and reburning for electricity, and is a viable option for energy storage for longer term compared to battery storage. Natural gas power plants could be converted to hydrogen power plants with minimal renovation or do a combined mix of natural gas and hydrogen.[1] [2]
Natural gas power plants could be designed with a transition to hydrogen in mind by having wider inlet pipes to the burner to increase flow rates because hydrogen is less dense than natural gas, and have the right material because hydrogen can cause hydrogen embrittlement.
Current electrolysis plants are not capable of providing the scale of hydrogen that is needed to provide for a large scale power plant. On site electrolysis may be needed, then storing large amounts of hydrogen could take up a lot of space if it is only compressed hydrogen and not Liquid hydrogen. Hydrogen embrittlement could happen in pipelines, but 316L stainless steel pipelines could handle compressed hydrogen above 50 Bar (unit), which is what compressed natural gas is piped at, or wider pipelines could be built for hydrogen. Polyethylene or fiber-reinforced polymer pipelines coule also be used.
When hydrogen is burned as a fuel no carbon dioxide is produced, but more nitrous oxide is produced because of the higher flame temperature from hydrogen, a selective catalytic reduction process could be implemented to break NO₂ down into just nitrogen and water. The exhaust from a burning hydrogen reaction is water vapor and could be used as a diluent to lower the high burning temp that creates the nitrous oxide.
Corrosion of the turbine from the water vapor from the hydrogen flame could reduce plant life or parts may need to be replaced more often.
Hydrogen is the smallest and lightest element and can leak more easily at connection points and joints. Hydrogen diffuses quickly mitigating explosions. A hydrogen flame is also not as visible as a standard flame.
Wind and solar power are variable renewable energy sources that aren't as consistent as base load energy. Hydrogen could help renewables by capturing excess energy, with electrolysis, when they produce too much, and fill the gaps with that energy when they aren't producing as much.
Xcel Energy is going to build two combined cycle natural gas power plants that use green hydrogen from the Prairie Island Nuclear Power Plant. The natural gas power plants will be able to use a 30% hydrogen mix with natural gas from the opening.[3]