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<title>Institute of Energy</title>
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<dc:date>2026-04-07T01:55:27Z</dc:date>
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<item rdf:about="http://reposit.library.du.ac.bd:8080/xmlui/xmlui/handle/123456789/2888">
<title>DEVELOPMENT AND PERFORMANCE ANALYSIS OF A GREEN HYDROGEN PRODUCTION SYSTEM FOR HYDROGEN  DEMAND OF BANGLADESH BY 2040</title>
<link>http://reposit.library.du.ac.bd:8080/xmlui/xmlui/handle/123456789/2888</link>
<description>DEVELOPMENT AND PERFORMANCE ANALYSIS OF A GREEN HYDROGEN PRODUCTION SYSTEM FOR HYDROGEN  DEMAND OF BANGLADESH BY 2040
Mazumder, Gour Chand
Nowadays, green hydrogen production through electrolysis of water, using&#13;
renewable energy sources like solar, wind is increasing worldwide, as it leaves no&#13;
emission behind. This work is intended to identify the diversified applications of&#13;
hydrogen in different sectors in Bangladesh like the chemical, food and metal&#13;
industries, fuel cells, bio-gas, heating applications, etc.  &#13;
In this research, a green hydrogen production system has been developed&#13;
using locally available materials and technologies. An electrolyzer is the central part&#13;
of this system. It has two cells connected in parallel and has bipolar electrode&#13;
configuration.  Each cell has 4 individual electrodes and one shared electrode. Total&#13;
9 electrodes have been used. Each electrode is positioned having an equal separation&#13;
from each other so that each electrode gets equal potential difference across them.&#13;
Here, 10.6 volt is applied to the assembly, and hence, each pair gets 2.65 volt. NaOH&#13;
solutions of different molarity are used to optimize the gas production rate.&#13;
Performance analysis of developed system shows that it can produce 92.5% pure&#13;
hydrogen with 30.62% efficiency and the production rate is 206 mL/min or 1.104&#13;
g/h or 0.0123 Nm&#13;
3&#13;
/h. A practical study on different electrolysis conditions are tested&#13;
before developing the electrolyzer. The study concludes that the solar photovoltaic&#13;
panels and wind turbines are technically feasible for water electrolysis.  &#13;
Wind speed data was collected for one year (July, 2015 to June, 2016 and&#13;
July, 2016 to June, 2017) at two sites in Chattogram and Dhaka, two busy&#13;
metropolitan cities in Bangladesh. The Weibull distribution of data shows that the&#13;
shape factor of the wind data in Dhaka (Lat: 23.7390° N, Long: 90.3831° E) is 1.42&#13;
and scale factor is 1.96 ms&#13;
-1&#13;
 at measured height of 27 meters from sea level. The&#13;
shape factor for Chattogram (Lat: 22.2877° N, Long: 91.7751° E) site is 1.8 and the&#13;
scale factor is 2.2 ms&#13;
-1&#13;
 at the height of 59 meters from sea level. It is found that the&#13;
scale factor significantly improves with the increase of hub heights. For Chattogram&#13;
site, scale factor is around 3.68 ms&#13;
-1&#13;
 at a height of 130 meter, and for the Dhaka site&#13;
it is nearly 4.17 ms&#13;
-1&#13;
 at 200 meters. &#13;
At measured height the yearly average energy density would be 7800 Whm&#13;
for Dhaka site and for Chattogram site it would be around 12300 Whm&#13;
. The site&#13;
specific wind characteristics suggest that the turbines having 2 ms&#13;
-1&#13;
 cut-in-speed and&#13;
10 ms&#13;
-1&#13;
 rated speed would produce energy with 30% capacity factor, from the month&#13;
of April to September, for both the sites. For the urban building rooftops, lightweight &#13;
small capacity (~1kW) wind turbines with mentioned characteristics are most &#13;
suitable. DB 400 and AWM-1500 model turbines have the similar characteristics and&#13;
were chosen for the further simulation. &#13;
&#13;
The values of the global solar radiation (taken from NASA for July 1983 to&#13;
June 2005) are 4.59 kWh/m&#13;
2&#13;
/day and 4.76 kWh/m&#13;
2&#13;
/day for Dhaka, and Chattogram,&#13;
respectively. The average sunshine hour for both the cities are about 4.5 hours/day.  &#13;
The economic feasibility, especially the Levelized Cost of hydrogen,&#13;
produced from PV and wind based power options, have been determined. Life-cyclecost&#13;
analysis&#13;
shows&#13;
that,&#13;
the&#13;
production&#13;
cost&#13;
of&#13;
hydrogen&#13;
of&#13;
a&#13;
plant&#13;
using&#13;
Solar&#13;
PV&#13;
&#13;
power&#13;
is&#13;
about&#13;
BDT&#13;
859.77/Nm&#13;
3&#13;
 or BDT 9.56/g. The electricity consumption of the&#13;
developed hydrogen plant is 3897.6 kWh/year and the energy requirement for&#13;
hydrogen production is about 108.72 kWh/kg. The amount of hydrogen yield is&#13;
35.85 kg or 398.56 Nm&#13;
3&#13;
 per year. Sensitivity analysis based on different parameters&#13;
finds that the production cost of hydrogen using solar power varies from BDT 7.99/g&#13;
to BDT 10.93/g or BDT 718.85/Nm&#13;
3&#13;
 to BDT 982.99/Nm&#13;
3&#13;
. The cost includes lead&#13;
acid battery cost, replacement cost and maintenance costs. On the other hand, for&#13;
wind power scheme, the production cost is about BDT 10.30/g or BDT 926.66/Nm&#13;
.&#13;
For wind-solar hybrid model, the production cost of hydrogen would be BDT 7.47/g&#13;
or BDT 671.71/Nm&#13;
3 &#13;
with reduced number of battery usage. Sensitivity could impact&#13;
the cost to vary between BDT 7.28/g or BDT 654.50/Nm&#13;
3&#13;
 to BDT 10.11/g or BDT&#13;
909.64/Nm&#13;
3&#13;
. Based on the simulated results, it is found that the solar-wind hybrid&#13;
model would be the most effective for green hydrogen production in Bangladesh. &#13;
Demand potential of hydrogen is estimated to cope with the targets of&#13;
Bangladesh Government by 2040. The demand potential analysis is based on the&#13;
methods and criteria adopted by the several international agencies, research institutes&#13;
and laboratories. Out of several methods and assumptions, three scenarios, each&#13;
having a specific percentage of different fuel mix are selected, modified and set for&#13;
Bangladesh. For Scenario-1, the least GDP growth case, Bangladesh would require&#13;
about 2.98 MTOE of hydrogen in 2040. The Scenario-2, set for the moderate GDP&#13;
growth case would require about 6.05 MTOE and for Scenario-3 which is the&#13;
maximum expected GDP growth case, the hydrogen requirement would be 9.12&#13;
MTOE. The power sector would consume about 70% whereas industries and&#13;
transport would consume 23% and 6%, respectively. However, considering the&#13;
socio-economic conditions of Bangladesh, Scenario-1 could be achieved easily with&#13;
the projected time period to enter in the world hydrogen economy.  &#13;
In comparison to the current international cost of hydrogen, the developed&#13;
electrolyzer shows higher production cost. The developed unit is a small capacity&#13;
electrolyzer and works properly to produce green hydrogen. Research should be&#13;
conducted to develop large scale electrolyzer in Bangladesh to evaluate the cost from&#13;
large scale production unit. Technology transfer may also help to establish green&#13;
hydrogen economy. Due to the availability of solar and wind resources, solar PV and&#13;
wind turbine technology would largely contribute to the green hydrogen production&#13;
in Bangladesh.
This thesis submitted in fulfillment of the requirements for the award of the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Renewable Energy Technology.
</description>
<dc:date>2023-12-24T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
</item>
<item rdf:about="http://reposit.library.du.ac.bd:8080/xmlui/xmlui/handle/123456789/2851">
<title>DEVELOPMENT AND PERFORMANCE ANALYSIS OF A GREEN HYDROGEN PRODUCTION SYSTEM FOR HYDROGEN  DEMAND OF BANGLADESH BY 2040</title>
<link>http://reposit.library.du.ac.bd:8080/xmlui/xmlui/handle/123456789/2851</link>
<description>DEVELOPMENT AND PERFORMANCE ANALYSIS OF A GREEN HYDROGEN PRODUCTION SYSTEM FOR HYDROGEN  DEMAND OF BANGLADESH BY 2040
Mazumder, Gour Chand
Nowadays, green hydrogen production through electrolysis of water, using&#13;
renewable energy sources like solar, wind is increasing worldwide, as it leaves no&#13;
emission behind. This work is intended to identify the diversified applications of&#13;
hydrogen in different sectors in Bangladesh like the chemical, food and metal&#13;
industries, fuel cells, bio-gas, heating applications, etc.  &#13;
In this research, a green hydrogen production system has been developed&#13;
using locally available materials and technologies. An electrolyzer is the central part&#13;
of this system. It has two cells connected in parallel and has bipolar electrode&#13;
configuration.  Each cell has 4 individual electrodes and one shared electrode. Total&#13;
9 electrodes have been used. Each electrode is positioned having an equal separation&#13;
from each other so that each electrode gets equal potential difference across them.&#13;
Here, 10.6 volt is applied to the assembly, and hence, each pair gets 2.65 volt. NaOH&#13;
solutions of different molarity are used to optimize the gas production rate.&#13;
Performance analysis of developed system shows that it can produce 92.5% pure&#13;
hydrogen with 30.62% efficiency and the production rate is 206 mL/min or 1.104&#13;
g/h or 0.0123 Nm&#13;
3&#13;
/h. A practical study on different electrolysis conditions are tested&#13;
before developing the electrolyzer. The study concludes that the solar photovoltaic&#13;
panels and wind turbines are technically feasible for water electrolysis.  &#13;
Wind speed data was collected for one year (July, 2015 to June, 2016 and&#13;
July, 2016 to June, 2017) at two sites in Chattogram and Dhaka, two busy&#13;
metropolitan cities in Bangladesh. The Weibull distribution of data shows that the&#13;
shape factor of the wind data in Dhaka (Lat: 23.7390° N, Long: 90.3831° E) is 1.42&#13;
and scale factor is 1.96 ms&#13;
-1&#13;
 at measured height of 27 meters from sea level. The&#13;
shape factor for Chattogram (Lat: 22.2877° N, Long: 91.7751° E) site is 1.8 and the&#13;
scale factor is 2.2 ms&#13;
-1&#13;
 at the height of 59 meters from sea level. It is found that the&#13;
scale factor significantly improves with the increase of hub heights. For Chattogram&#13;
site, scale factor is around 3.68 ms&#13;
-1&#13;
 at a height of 130 meter, and for the Dhaka site&#13;
it is nearly 4.17 ms&#13;
-1&#13;
 at 200 meters. &#13;
At measured height the yearly average energy density would be 7800 Whm&#13;
for Dhaka site and for Chattogram site it would be around 12300 Whm&#13;
. The site&#13;
specific wind characteristics suggest that the turbines having 2 ms&#13;
-1&#13;
 cut-in-speed and&#13;
10 ms&#13;
-1&#13;
 rated speed would produce energy with 30% capacity factor, from the month&#13;
of April to September, for both the sites. For the urban building rooftops, lightweight &#13;
small capacity (~1kW) wind turbines with mentioned characteristics are most &#13;
suitable. DB 400 and AWM-1500 model turbines have the similar characteristics and&#13;
were chosen for the further simulation. &#13;
&#13;
The values of the global solar radiation (taken from NASA for July 1983 to&#13;
June 2005) are 4.59 kWh/m&#13;
2&#13;
/day and 4.76 kWh/m&#13;
2&#13;
/day for Dhaka, and Chattogram,&#13;
respectively. The average sunshine hour for both the cities are about 4.5 hours/day.  &#13;
The economic feasibility, especially the Levelized Cost of hydrogen,&#13;
produced from PV and wind based power options, have been determined. Life-cyclecost&#13;
analysis&#13;
shows&#13;
that,&#13;
the&#13;
production&#13;
cost&#13;
of&#13;
hydrogen&#13;
of&#13;
a&#13;
plant&#13;
using&#13;
Solar&#13;
PV&#13;
&#13;
power&#13;
is&#13;
about&#13;
BDT&#13;
859.77/Nm&#13;
3&#13;
 or BDT 9.56/g. The electricity consumption of the&#13;
developed hydrogen plant is 3897.6 kWh/year and the energy requirement for&#13;
hydrogen production is about 108.72 kWh/kg. The amount of hydrogen yield is&#13;
35.85 kg or 398.56 Nm&#13;
3&#13;
 per year. Sensitivity analysis based on different parameters&#13;
finds that the production cost of hydrogen using solar power varies from BDT 7.99/g&#13;
to BDT 10.93/g or BDT 718.85/Nm&#13;
3&#13;
 to BDT 982.99/Nm&#13;
3&#13;
. The cost includes lead&#13;
acid battery cost, replacement cost and maintenance costs. On the other hand, for&#13;
wind power scheme, the production cost is about BDT 10.30/g or BDT 926.66/Nm&#13;
.&#13;
For wind-solar hybrid model, the production cost of hydrogen would be BDT 7.47/g&#13;
or BDT 671.71/Nm&#13;
3 &#13;
with reduced number of battery usage. Sensitivity could impact&#13;
the cost to vary between BDT 7.28/g or BDT 654.50/Nm&#13;
3&#13;
 to BDT 10.11/g or BDT&#13;
909.64/Nm&#13;
3&#13;
. Based on the simulated results, it is found that the solar-wind hybrid&#13;
model would be the most effective for green hydrogen production in Bangladesh. &#13;
Demand potential of hydrogen is estimated to cope with the targets of&#13;
Bangladesh Government by 2040. The demand potential analysis is based on the&#13;
methods and criteria adopted by the several international agencies, research institutes&#13;
and laboratories. Out of several methods and assumptions, three scenarios, each&#13;
having a specific percentage of different fuel mix are selected, modified and set for&#13;
Bangladesh. For Scenario-1, the least GDP growth case, Bangladesh would require&#13;
about 2.98 MTOE of hydrogen in 2040. The Scenario-2, set for the moderate GDP&#13;
growth case would require about 6.05 MTOE and for Scenario-3 which is the&#13;
maximum expected GDP growth case, the hydrogen requirement would be 9.12&#13;
MTOE. The power sector would consume about 70% whereas industries and&#13;
transport would consume 23% and 6%, respectively. However, considering the&#13;
socio-economic conditions of Bangladesh, Scenario-1 could be achieved easily with&#13;
the projected time period to enter in the world hydrogen economy.  &#13;
In comparison to the current international cost of hydrogen, the developed&#13;
electrolyzer shows higher production cost. The developed unit is a small capacity&#13;
electrolyzer and works properly to produce green hydrogen. Research should be&#13;
conducted to develop large scale electrolyzer in Bangladesh to evaluate the cost from&#13;
large scale production unit. Technology transfer may also help to establish green&#13;
hydrogen economy. Due to the availability of solar and wind resources, solar PV and&#13;
wind turbine technology would largely contribute to the green hydrogen production&#13;
in Bangladesh.
A thesis submitted in fulfillment of the requirements for the award of the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Renewable Energy Technology.
</description>
<dc:date>2023-12-12T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
</item>
<item rdf:about="http://reposit.library.du.ac.bd:8080/xmlui/xmlui/handle/123456789/547">
<title>Design, construction and performance analysis of a solar powered dual mode desalination system for water purification</title>
<link>http://reposit.library.du.ac.bd:8080/xmlui/xmlui/handle/123456789/547</link>
<description>Design, construction and performance analysis of a solar powered dual mode desalination system for water purification
Shishir, Asif Jaman
Human life is based on water. Safe drinking water is one of our fundamental needs. Water is one of the most abundant resources on earth covering 75% of the planet’s surface. About 97% of the earth’s water is salt water in the oceans, and a tiny 3% is fresh water. Sea water contains large amount of salts. The salts exist in the form of chloride, sulfate, sodium, magnesium, potassium etc. Chloride and sulfate contribute to about 55% and 31% of sea salts respectively. Eating small quantities of saline water are not harmful, but more can be dangerous, ultimately producing fatal seizures, heart arrhythmias and kidney failure. Other than salts, there are many other unwanted elements, like bacteria, Parasites and heavy metals in the water. Major parts of Bangladesh do not have access to safe drinking water. Fresh water which was once obtained from rivers, lakes and ponds in plenty is now becoming scarce because of industrialization and population explosion. Increased irrigation of land for producing larger amount of food adds to the fresh water scarcity. Also, the available portable water is now increasingly being polluted by industrial and sewage waste. Therefore, there is need to purify the water to make suitable for drinking. It would be feasible to address the water-shortage problem with seawater desalination; however, the separation of salts from seawater requires large amounts of energy which, when produced from fossil fuels, can cause harm to the environment. Therefore, there is a need to employ environmentally friendly energy sources in order to desalinate seawater. As a part of my thesis, I have made a single basin single slope desalination device, where I used dual mode thermal energy for quick vaporization. One is the thermal energy trapped from solar radiation through a transparent top cover. Another one is the thermal energy of DC heaters powered by Photovoltaic module. Designed device is renewable energy (Solar) based and environmentally-friendly. This can be used for water heating, desalination and purification. This report covers introduction into desalination, comparative analysis of current desalination technologies. Some general concepts are given for the proper selection of desalination method. Description of designed desalination device is given in detail. After that, its construction, total cost, performance, efficiency and results are given here. Device maintenance, drawbacks and few related points etc. are also studied. From this research, I have concluded that, solar powered dual mode desalination may not be a viable option at the present price structure, further research for efficiency improvement of device could make solar assisted desalination one of the most economically advantageous device.
This thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science in Renewable Energy Technology.
</description>
<dc:date>2016-11-20T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
</item>
<item rdf:about="http://reposit.library.du.ac.bd:8080/xmlui/xmlui/handle/123456789/546">
<title>Design, construction and performance study of a low cost solar dryer for food preservation in Bangladesh</title>
<link>http://reposit.library.du.ac.bd:8080/xmlui/xmlui/handle/123456789/546</link>
<description>Design, construction and performance study of a low cost solar dryer for food preservation in Bangladesh
Biswas, Pias Kumar
The solar drying system utilizes solar energy to heat up air and to dry any food substance loaded, which is beneficial in reducing wastage of agricultural product and helps in preservation. The objective of the thesis is to design, develop and evaluate performance of an indirect solar dryer using thermal energy storage for the drying of vegetables and other foods. Later the future prospects in Bangladesh have been discussed in details. This design was employed by measuring various features such as cost, efficiency, durability and has compared with the performance testing through parameters such as temperature, air velocity, collector efficiency and weight loss. It was shown that the use of this type of solar dryer reduced the drying time significantly and essentially provide better product quality compared with conventional drying method. The effect of temperature to moisture contents against time and rate of drying are studied in this thesis.
This thesis is submitted to the Institute of Energy at the University of Dhaka in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Masters of Science in Renewable Energy Technology.
</description>
<dc:date>2016-11-20T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
</item>
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