International Journal of Hydrogen Energy, Vol.36, No.13, 8103-8111, 2011
Life cycle analysis and cost of a molten carbonate fuel cell prototype
The LCA is a method enabling the performance of a complete study on the environmental impacts of the product, taking into consideration all its life cycle (from the cradle to the tomb" or, better "from the cradle to the cradle" when also the maximum recycling/reusing of the materials is provided. There are many procedures to perform an LCA of the consumers' products. In particular, the SUMMA method (Sustainability Multi-criteria Multi-scale Assessment) allows obtaining a number of indices of efficiency and environmental sustainability which make the LCA assessment much more complete and significant. LCA method often represents the basis for an additional assessment of industrial products and processes, the LCC (Life Cycle Costing) which, allowing the association of economic variables to any phase of the life cycle, represents a useful tool for financial planning and management. The case study analysed in the present work concerns an LCA analysis, using the SUMMA method and the LCC of one small size molten carbonate fuel cell, 2.5 kW, assembled in the Fuel Cells Laboratory within the Educational Pole of Terni at the Universita degli Studi di Perugia. For sake of completeness of the results, the methods Ecoindicator99 and Impact2002 + were used in the analysis, as implemented in the used calculation software, the SimaPro 7.1 by PRe Consultants. From the registered results, it emerges that the environmental energy sustainability of the analysed element enables its widespread and in-depth employment in the phase subsequent to the optimisation of the connected economic frame; the scenarios opened by the present work envisage great margins of improvements of said aspects in the future experiments. Copyright (C) 2011, Hydrogen Energy Publications, LLC. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Keywords:Life cycle analysis;Molten carbonate fuel cell;Life cycle costing;Sustainability Multi-criteria Multi-scale Assessment