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Article Citation - WoS: 8Citation - Scopus: 8Experimental and Modeling Studies of a High-Temperature Electrochemical Hydrogen Compressor(Pergamon-elsevier Science Ltd, 2024) Durmus, Gizem Nur Bulanik; Kuzu, Cemil; Devrim, Yilser; Colpan, C. OzgurSome non-technical factors such as economics and logistics prevent hydrogen (H2) tech-nologies from becoming more widespread in daily life. Today, the prevalence of H2 tech-nologies requires new technological developments. Electrochemical hydrogen compressors (ECHC) are of great interest due to their ability to pressurize and purify in one step. In this study, the electrochemical H2 compression performance of high phosphoric acid (PA) doped poly 2,2-m-phenylene-5,5-benzimidazole (PBI) membrane-based HT-ECHC under high temperature and non-humid conditions was investigated through both an experimental and a numerical approach. The H2 compression capacity of HT-ECHC at different operating voltages was examined by performance tests at 160 degrees C, and it was determined that the electrochemical compression performance increased with increasing operating voltage. It was observed that the current density values also increased with increasing voltage, and it was determined that a current density of 61.2 A was obtained at 1 V. As a result of the tests, H2 was successfully compressed from atmospheric pressure to 60 bar by HT-ECHC without any gas leakage. The results of the developed model were compared with the experimental performance test data, and the variation of molar flow, cell voltage, and cell efficiency over time was examined. It has been determined that the back diffusion from the cathode to the anode in the cell increases with the increasing operating voltage of HT-ECHC and therefore the cell efficiency decreases. It has been evaluated that the developed model and experimental results are in good agreement. (c) 2023 Hydrogen Energy Publications LLC. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.Article Citation - WoS: 8Citation - Scopus: 10Computing Reliability Indices of a Wind Power System Via Markov Chain Modelling of Wind Speed(Sage Publications Ltd, 2024) Eryilmaz, Serkan; Bulanik, Irem; Devrim, YilserStatistical modelling of wind speed is of great importance in the evaluation of wind farm performance and power production. Various models have been proposed in the literature depending on the corresponding time scale. For hourly observed wind speed data, the dependence among successive wind speed values is inevitable. Such a dependence has been well modelled by Markov chains. In this paper, the use of Markov chains for modelling wind speed data is discussed in the context of the previously proposed likelihood ratio test. The main steps for Markov chain based modelling methodology of wind speed are presented and the limiting distribution of the Markov chain is utilized to compute wind speed probabilities. The computational formulas for reliability indices of a wind farm consisting of a specified number of wind turbines are presented through the limiting distribution of a Markov chain. A case study that is based on real data set is also presented.Article Citation - WoS: 15Citation - Scopus: 15Optimal Design and Technoeconomic Analysis of On-Site Hydrogen Refueling Station Powered by Wind and Solar Photovoltaic Hybrid Energy Systems(Pergamon-elsevier Science Ltd, 2025) Ozturk, Reyhan Atabay; Devrim, YilserIn this study, a grid-connected on-site hydrogen filling station (HRS) integrated with renewable energy systems is designed and examined for different daily hydrogen refueling capacities. The installation location of the HRS is selected in Izmir (Turkey) and daily solar radiation and wind speed data are used in the calculations. The HRS station was integrated with a hybrid energy system using photovoltaic panels (PV), wind turbine (WT) and PV/ WT and five different daily refueling scenarios were investigated. A techno-economic analysis is conducted for the designed HRS system, considering the initial investment capital, installation and operating costs. The levelized cost of hydrogen (LCOH) is evaluated according to different refueling capacity scenarios, periods of operation and renewable energy installation capacities. The lowest LCOH is obtained as 4.5 /kg H2 in the PVintegrated HRS system for a 20-year investment scenario. The results prove the suitability of the HRS system for integrating renewable energy in the identified region. It is recommended to integrate analytical models for the system components to increase the reliability of the design and optimization process in future planned studies.Article Citation - WoS: 2Citation - Scopus: 2Performance Assessment of Anion Exchange Electrolyzer With PBI-BASED Membrane Through 0-D Modeling(Elsevier Ltd, 2025) Celebi, Ceren; Colpan, C. Ozgur; Devrim, YilserAnion exchange membrane (AEM) water electrolysis is emerging as a promising method for the sustainable production of hydrogen. A key advantage lies in the potential for cost-effective hydrogen production by substituting expensive noble metal electrocatalysts with affordable transition metals. This work presents a 0-D mathematical model for evaluating the performance of AEMWEs, with a particular focus on polybenzimidazole (PBI)-based membranes, which are renowned for their high thermal stability, chemical resistance and excellent conductivity in alkaline media. The objective of the model is to predict the behavior of membranes in AEMWE systems, and it has been employed to evaluate the performance of a range of PBI membranes. To ensure precision, the values were meticulously selected from the literature, in accordance with the experimental conditions. Furthermore, IR-corrected validation was incorporated to isolate the impact of membrane conductivity on performance, thereby facilitating a dependable assessment of PBI membranes under diverse conditions. The model considers the effects of electrolyte resistance and bubble formation on cell voltage behavior. The efficiency was evaluated on the basis of the higher heating value (HHV). The findings demonstrate that one membrane exhibits consistent efficiency across a broad temperature range (40-90 degrees C), whereas the other displays notable variability under diverse conditions. In particular, the efficiency of the electrolyzer is significantly enhanced by the use of thinner membranes and higher temperatures. The highest efficiencies obtained were 83.9% and 79.8% for 25 mu m and 50 mu m PBI/Polystyrene membrane under the operating conditions of 1 M KOH solution at 80 degrees C and current density of 2 A/cm2. This study aims to provide valuable information on the performance of PBI membranes through a zero-dimensional model validated by experimental data.Article Citation - WoS: 5Citation - Scopus: 5Performance Analysis of a Gas-To System Based on Protonic-Ceramic Electrochemical Compressor(Pergamon-elsevier Science Ltd, 2023) Baniasadi, Ehsan; Ghojavand, Fateme; Colpan, Can Ozgur; Devrim, YilserIn this study, two scenarios are considered to evaluate the performance of a protonic ceramic electrochemical hydrogen compressor (EHC) and reformer integrated with a pro-ton exchange membrane fuel cell (PEMFC). First scenario includes integration of an EHC with PEMFC and in the second scenario, steam methane reforming (SMR) is replaced by an EHC. Results show that the highest energy and exergy efficiencies of the system in the first scenario is achieved when the area-specific resistance (ASR) in EHC is 1.5 Ucm2. An in-crease in the working temperature of EHC causes a considerable rise in the exergy destruction and an increase of energy efficiency by 7% in the first scenario, while the temperature of the reformer affects the exergy destruction, negligibly. The parametric study indicates that the best value of the current density of PEMFC is 0.8481 A/cm2 and 0.8324 A/cm2 and the best current density of PEM-EHC value is 0.4468 A/cm2 and 0.11 A/cm2 in the 1st and 2nd scenarios, respectively. Under the same conditions, energy and exergy efficiencies for the first scenario are 61.63% and 54.9% and for the second scenario are 42.48% and 14.61%, respectively.(c) 2023 Hydrogen Energy Publications LLC. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.Article Citation - Scopus: 1The Distribution of Wind Power from a Dispersed Array of Wind Turbine Generators and Its Reliability Based Applications(Elsevier, 2026) Eryilmaz, Serkan; Kan, Cihangir; Devrim, YilserIn this paper, the probability distribution of wind power from a dispersed array of wind turbine sites is studied considering forced outage rates of wind turbines. The wind speeds at distinct sites are assumed to be dependent and the dependence is modeled by copulas. In particular, the probability distribution of the aggregate power from two sites is exactly derived. The probability distribution of the aggregate power is also derived under the particular case when site 1 consists of n1 identical wind turbines of type 1 and site 2 consists of n2 identical wind turbines of type 2. Numerical results are presented to illustrate the theoretical findings for a chosen copula function.Article Citation - WoS: 3Citation - Scopus: 3A Review on Membranes for Anion Exchange Membrane Water Electrolyzers(Pergamon-Elsevier Science Ltd, 2026) Altinisik, Hasan; Celebi, Ceren; Ozden, Adnan; Devrim, Yilser; Colpan, C. OzgurAnion exchange membrane water electrolyzers (AEMWEs) - using water and renewable electricity as the input - provide a sustainable pathway to hydrogen production. AEMWEs perform the cathodic hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) and anodic oxygen evolution reaction (OER) with modest overpotentials at practical current densities (>1 A cm(-2)). The recent catalysis, component, and system-level breakthroughs have enabled significant improvements in current densities and energetic efficiencies. The challenge, however, is to maintain these impressive activities and efficiencies through long-term operation at scale. High-performance, efficient, stable, and economically viable AEMWEs require high-performance, low-cost, and scalable anion exchange membranes (AEMs). This Review provides an overview of physical, chemical, and transport properties of commercial and non-commercial AEMs. The article discusses the operating principles, structures, characteristics, strengths, and weaknesses of conventional and emerging AEMs, along with their performance and stability implications in AEMWEs. The article highlights the characteristics that have intricate implications on performance, stability, and cost. It discusses recent advances and best practices to combine high-performance, efficiency, stability, and low-cost in a single AEM structure. The Review highlights the trade-offs between AEM characteristics, with an overview of emerging approaches that would overcome performance, stability, and cost challenges. The Review concludes by highlighting the research gaps and providing research directions with the potential to take the technology a step closer to wide-scale deployment.Article Citation - WoS: 6Citation - Scopus: 7Polyethyleneimine Functionalized Waste Tissue Paper@waste PET Composite for the Effective Adsorption and Filtration of Organic Dyes From Wastewater(Elsevier B.V., 2025) Radoor, Sabarish; Karayil, Jasila; Devrim, Yilser; Kim, HernThis study explores the potential of repurposing discarded plastic bottles and cellulosic paper waste to develop cost-effective and high-performance composites for dye removal applications. A novel composite, polyethyleneimine (PEI)-functionalized waste tissue integrated into waste polyethylene terephthalate (wPET) (PEIWT/wPET), was designed as an environmentally friendly adsorbent for wastewater treatment. Successful surface functionalization with PEI was confirmed through FTIR, EDX, and XPS analyses. The PEI-modified composite exhibited enhanced mechanical and thermal stability while demonstrating significantly improved dye adsorption/filtration performance. The composite was evaluated for the removal of both cationic (crystal violet, CV) and anionic (orange II, O II) dyes under optimized conditions; (10,000 mg/L and 1666 mg/L) adsorbent dosage, (11 and 1) pH, 10 mg/L initial dye concentration, and (180 min and 120 min) contact time for CV and O II respectively. Experimental results showed that PEIWT/wPET achieved maximum adsorption capacities of 3.94 mg/g for CV and 11.73 mg/g for O II, approximately five times higher than the unmodified composite (0.74 and 2.4 mg/g). Adsorption isotherm and kinetic studies indicated that the data aligned well with the Langmuir as well as Freundlich and pseudo-second order models. The membrane also exhibited filtration capability for both dyes, achieving a filtration efficiency of 78.69 % for anionic and 41.31 % for cationic dye separation. Overall, the PEIWT/wPET composite offers a promising, sustainable, and energy-efficient solution for the removal of organic pollutants.Article Citation - WoS: 61Citation - Scopus: 77Green Hydrogen Based Off-Grid and On-Grid Hybrid Energy Systems(Pergamon-elsevier Science Ltd, 2023) Ceylan, Ceren; Devrim, YilserThis study aims to evaluate a green hydrogen (H2) based hybrid energy system (HES) from solar and wind renewable energy sources. The proposed HES contains PV panels, wind turbines and a proton exchange membrane water electrolyzer. Meteorology data such as solar radiation, temperature and wind speed were obtained from Atilim University Incek Campus Meteorology Station (Ankara, Turkey). The designed HES has been examined as both grid-connected and off-grid. In the grid-connected system, the electricity requirement of the load is supplied by the sun and wind, and the surplus energy produced is stored by producing H2 using an electrolyzer. In the off-grid HES, the electricity requirement of the load is completely provided by the proton exchange membrane fuel cell (PEMFC). In this system, the electrolyzer produces the H2 needed by the PEMFC with the energy provided by solar and wind energy. According to the results, 20,186 kWh of energy is produced annually in the on-grid and 3273 sm3 of H2 is stored. The off-grid system is investigated for Design-1 and Design-2 using two different wind turbine (WT) rated power. In Design-1 and Design-2, annually 95,145 kWh and 83,511 kWh of energy are produced annually 17,942 sm3 and 14,370 sm3 H2 are stored, respectively. When the on-grid and off-grid systems are examined; levelized cost of energy (LCOE) was calculated as 0.223 $/kWh for the on-grid system and 0.416 $/kWh and 0.410 $/kWh for Design-1 and Design-2 for off-grid systems, respectively. (c) 2023 Hydrogen Energy Publications LLC. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
