![]() HIGH-TEMPERATURE REVERSIBLE WATER ELECTROLYSIS SYSTEM COMPRISING A HYDRIDE RESERVOIR COUPLED TO THE
专利摘要:
The main object of the invention is a system (10) for the reversible electrolysis of water at high temperature, characterized in that it comprises: a high temperature reversible electrolyser (11), configured to operate in a manner of SOEC-type solid-oxide electrolyser for the production of hydrogen and the storage of electricity, and / or in a SOFC-type solid oxide fuel cell mode, for the removal of hydrogen and the production of electricity ; a hydride reservoir (12), thermally coupled with said reversible electrolyser, the system being configured to allow recovery of heat released by the hydride reservoir upon absorption of the hydrogen to produce the water vapor under pressure to enter the reversible electrolyser SOEC type, and to allow recovery of the heat released by the outflow (s) of the reversible electrolyser when SOFC type to allow the desorption of hydrogen from the reservoir of hydrides. 公开号:FR3056230A1 申请号:FR1658750 申请日:2016-09-19 公开日:2018-03-23 发明作者:Vincent Lacroix;Albin Chaise;Julie Cren;Magali REYTIER;Guilhem Roux 申请人:Commissariat a lEnergie Atomique CEA;Commissariat a lEnergie Atomique et aux Energies Alternatives CEA; IPC主号:
专利说明:
Holder (s): COMMISSIONER OF ATOMIC ENERGY AND ALTERNATIVE ENERGIES Public establishment. Extension request (s) Agent (s): BREVALEX Limited liability company. FR 3 056 230 - A1 (54) REVERSIBLE WATER ELECTROLYSIS SYSTEM WITH HYDRIDE TANK COUPLED TO THE ELECTROLYSER. ©) The main object of the invention is a system (10) for reversible electrolysis of water at high temperature, characterized in that it comprises: a reversible high temperature electrolyser (11), configured to operate according to a SOEC type solid oxide chlorinator mode, for hydrogen production and electricity storage, and / or according to a SOFC type solid oxide fuel cell mode, for hydrogen destocking and production electricity; a hydride tank (12), thermally coupled to said reversible electrolyser, the system being configured to allow recovery of the heat released by the hydride tank during the absorption of hydrogen to produce water vapor under pressure intended to enter the reversible electrolyser when of the SOEC type, and to allow recovery of the heat given off by the outgoing stream (s) of the reversible electrolyser when of the SOFC type to allow the desorption of hydrogen from the reservoir d 'hydrides. HIGH TEMPERATURE WITH i / O) ', L. 13 24 2 μ OH 2 Orecup HIGH-TEMPERATURE REVERSIBLE WATER ELECTROLYSIS SYSTEM COMPRISING A HYDRIDE TANK COUPLED TO THE ELECTROLYSER DESCRIPTION TECHNICAL AREA The present invention relates to the general field of electrolysis of water at high temperature (EHT), in particular the electrolysis of water vapor at high temperature (EVHT), respectively designated by the English designations “High Temperature Electrolysis ”(HTE) and“ High Temperature Steam Electrolysis ”(HTSE). It also relates to the field of solid oxide fuel cells, usually designated by the acronym SOFC for "Solid Oxide Fuel Cells" in English. More specifically, the invention relates to the storage of electricity and its restitution, or destocking, by means of a reversible electrolysis of water, resulting in the production and / or consumption of hydrogen. Thus, the invention provides a system for reversible electrolysis of water at high temperature comprising a device forming a reversible electrolyzer and a hydride tank thermally coupled to this electrolyser, as well as an associated reversible electrolysis process. PRIOR STATE OF THE ART To carry out the electrolysis of water, it is advantageous to carry it out at high temperature, typically between 600 and 950 ° C., since it is more advantageous to electrolyze steam than liquid water (15%) and that part of the energy necessary for the reaction can be provided by heat, cheaper than electricity. To implement the electrolysis of water at high temperature (EHT), it is known to use a solid oxide electrolyser at high temperature of the SOEC type (for “Solid Oxide Electrolyzer Cell” in English), consisting of a stack of elementary patterns each comprising a solid oxide electrolysis cell, consisting of three anode / electrolyte / cathode layers superposed one on the other, and interconnection plates of metal alloys, also called bipolar plates or interconnects . A solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC) consists of the same type of stack of elementary patterns. It should be noted that the interconnection devices, electrical and fluid, also called interconnectors or interconnection plates, are the devices which ensure the connection in series from an electrical point of view of each electrochemical cell of elementary pattern in the stacking of elementary patterns of high temperature solid oxide electrolysers (SOEC) or solid oxide fuel cells (SOFC), and in parallel from a fluidic point of view, thus combining the production of each of the cells. The interconnectors thus ensure the functions of supply and collection of electric current and delimit gas circulation compartments, for distribution and / or collection. More specifically, the interconnects have the function of ensuring both the passage of electric current and the circulation of gases in the vicinity of each cell (namely: injected water vapor, hydrogen and oxygen extracted for EHT electrolysis; air and fuel including hydrogen injected and water extracted for a SOFC cell), and to separate the anode and cathode compartments which are the gas circulation compartments on the side of the anodes and cathodes of the cells respectively. To perform electrolysis of high temperature water vapor (EHT), water vapor (H 2 O) is injected into the cathode compartment. Under the effect of the electric current applied to the cell, the dissociation of water molecules in the form of vapor is carried out at the interface between the hydrogen electrode (cathode) and the electrolyte: this dissociation produces dihydrogen gas ( H 2 ) and oxygen ions (O 2 j. Dihydrogen (H2) is collected and discharged at the outlet of the hydrogen compartment. Oxygen ions (O 2 j migrate through the electrolyte and recombine into dioxygen (O2) at the interface between the electrolyte and the oxygen electrode (anode). A draining gas, such as air, can circulate at the level of the anode and thus collect the oxygen generated in gaseous form at the anode . To ensure the functioning of a solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC), air (oxygen) is injected into the cathode compartment of the cell and hydrogen is injected into the anode compartment. The oxygen in the air will dissociate into O 2 ions. These ions will migrate in the electrolyte from the cathode to the anode to oxidize the hydrogen and form water with simultaneous production of electricity. In SOFC cells, just like in SOEC electrolysis, the water vapor is in the dihydrogen (H2) compartment. Only the polarity is reversed. By way of illustration, FIG. 1 represents a schematic view showing the operating principle of a high temperature solid oxide electrolyser (SOEC). Such an electrolyser is an electrochemical device for producing hydrogen (and oxygen) under the effect of an electric current. In these electrolysers, the electrolysis of water at high temperature is carried out using water vapor. Thus, the function of such an electrolyser is to transform water vapor into hydrogen and oxygen according to the following electrochemical reaction: 2H 2 OB 2H2 + O2. This reaction is carried out electrochemically in the cells of the electrolyser. As shown diagrammatically in FIG. 1, each elementary electrolysis cell 1 is formed by a cathode 2 and an anode 4, placed on either side of a solid electrolyte 3. The two electrodes (cathode and anode) 2 and 4 are electronic and / or ionic conductors, made of porous material, and the electrolyte 3 is gas tight, electronic insulator and ionic conductor. The electrolyte 3 can in particular be an anionic conductor, more precisely an anionic conductor of O 2 ions and the electrolyser is then called anionic electrolyser, as opposed to proton electrolytes (H + ). The electrochemical reactions take place at the interface between each of the electronic conductors and the ionic conductor. At cathode 2, the half-reaction is as follows: H 2 O + 4 e A 2 H 2 + 2 O 2 . At anode 4, the half-reaction is as follows: O 2 AO 2 + 4é. The electrolyte 3, inserted between the two electrodes 2 and 4, is the place of migration of the O 2 ions under the effect of the electric field created by the potential difference imposed between the anode 4 and the cathode 2. As illustrated in parentheses in FIG. 1, the water vapor entering the cathode can be accompanied by hydrogen H 2 and the hydrogen produced and recovered at the output can be accompanied by water vapor. Likewise, as illustrated in dotted lines, a draining gas, such as air, can also be injected at the inlet to evacuate the oxygen produced. The injection of a draining gas has the additional function of playing the role of thermal regulator. An elementary electrolyser, or electrolysis reactor, consists of an elementary cell as described above, with a cathode 2, an electrolyte 3, and an anode 4, and two mono-polar connectors which provide the functions of electrical, hydraulic and thermal distribution. To increase the flow rates of hydrogen and oxygen produced, it is known to stack several elementary electrolysis cells on top of each other by separating them by interconnection devices, usually called interconnectors or bipolar interconnection plates. The assembly is positioned between two end interconnection plates which support the electrical supplies and gas supplies of the electrolyser (electrolysis reactor). A high temperature solid oxide electrolyser (SOEC) thus comprises at least one, generally a plurality of electrolysis cells stacked one on the other, each elementary cell being formed of an electrolyte, a cathode and a anode, the electrolyte being interposed between the anode and the cathode. As indicated above, the fluidic and electrical interconnection devices which are in electrical contact with one or more electrodes generally provide the functions of supplying and collecting electrical current and delimit one or more compartments for the circulation of gases. Thus, a so-called cathode compartment has the function of distributing electric current and water vapor as well as recovering hydrogen at the cathode in contact. A so-called anode compartment has the function of distributing electric current as well as recovering the oxygen produced at the anode in contact, possibly using a draining gas. FIG. 2 represents an exploded view of elementary patterns of a high temperature solid oxide electrolyser (SOEC) according to the prior art. This electrolyser comprises a plurality of elementary electrolysis cells Cl, C2, of the solid oxide type (SOEC), stacked alternately with interconnectors 5. Each cell Cl, C2 consists of a cathode 2.1, 2.2 and an anode (only the anode 4.2 of cell C2 is shown), between which an electrolyte is placed (only the electrolyte 3.2 of cell C2 is shown). The interconnector 5 is a metal alloy component which ensures the separation between the cathode 50 and anode 51 compartments, defined by the volumes comprised between the interconnector 5 and the adjacent cathode 2.1 and between the interconnector 5 and the adjacent anode 4.2 respectively. It also ensures the distribution of gases to the cells. The injection of water vapor into each elementary pattern takes place in the cathode compartment 50. The collection of the hydrogen produced and of the residual water vapor at the cathode 2.1, 2.2. is carried out in the cathode compartment 50 downstream of the cell C1, C2 after dissociation of the water vapor by the latter. The oxygen produced at the anode 4.2 is collected in the anode compartment 51 downstream of the cell C1, C2 after dissociation of the water vapor by the latter. The interconnector 5 ensures the passage of current between the cells C1 and C2 by direct contact with the adjacent electrodes, that is to say between the anode 4.2 and the cathode 2.1. FIG. 3 represents an exploded view of elementary patterns of a solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC) according to the prior art. The same elementary patterns as those of FIG. 2 are used for a SOFC fuel cell with cells of elementary cells C1, C2 and interconnectors 5. The cathodes 2.1, 2.2 of the electrolyser described above with reference to the figure 2 are then used as anodes for a SOFC cell and the anodes 4.1, 4.2 as cathodes. Thus, for operation in SOFC battery mode, the injection of air containing oxygen in each elementary pattern is done in the compartment which has become cathode 51. The water produced at the anode is collected in the compartment become anodic 50 downstream of the Cl cell, C2, after recombination in water of the hydrogen H 2 injected at the anode 2.2 in each anode compartment 50 upstream of the Cl cell, C2 with the O 2 ions having passed through the electrolyte 3.2. The current produced during the recombination of the water is collected by the interconnectors 5. The operating conditions of a high temperature solid oxide electrolyser (SOEC) being very close to those of a solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC), the same technological constraints are found, namely mainly the mechanical resistance to temperatures and thermal cycles of a stack of different materials (ceramics and metal alloy), maintaining the tightness of the anode and cathode compartments, the aging resistance of the metal interconnectors and minimizing ohmic losses at various interfaces of the stack. An important constraint is to best manage the thermal operating regimes of a solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC) within which the hydrogen oxidation reaction is very exothermic, or of a water electrolyser. at high temperature (EHT) where the overall reaction can be either exothermic, endothermic, or globally isothermal (autothermal operation) depending on the operating potential. In particular for the very exothermic reaction of a solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC), it is necessary to provide means for cooling the system. Thus, to allow cooling and limit the temperature gradient in the stack, without harming the rate of fuel use (defined as the percentage of incoming reagents consumed by the reaction within the stack), the main variable d The possible adjustment is the air flow on the cathode side, in relation to the need for the electrochemical reaction. If this technique remains relatively acceptable at low pressure, the overconsumption of gas compressors, resulting from the increase in the quantity of gas to be compressed upstream of the SOFC stack, quickly becomes unacceptable for the overall energy efficiency at higher pressure. Alternative solutions have already been envisaged in the prior art for this type of technology, and in particular to allow such cooling of the system during the exothermic reaction of hydrogen oxidation in a SOFC cell. Thus, several patent documents already exist at the level of the electrolyser object in order to maintain the temperature within the acceptable limits of the system. We can thus note patent documents highlighting the heat exchange between the stack and the enclosure containing it, such as patent application US 2006/0105213 A1 which proposes to lengthen the interconnector plates in order to form exchange fins. thermal, or international application WO 2013/060869 A1 which has thick profiled interconnector plates so as to improve thermal transfers by radiation. Other patent documents highlight the possibility of using a heat transfer fluid, distinct from the cathode and anode gases, directly within the stack in order to evacuate the heat produced, such as the patent application GB 2. 151,840. For thermal management of a stack at the system level, American patent application US 2009/0263680 A1 describes the use, in an on-board system, of a non-reactive heat transfer fluid (air, steam, etc.). ) injected through the SOFC stack to provide thermal inertia to the cells, and thus easily dissipate reaction heat. The aim is to obtain efficient cooling of the cell, with the possibility of producing additional electricity thanks to a downstream turbine taking advantage of the heating of the heat transfer fluid. In addition, recycling of part of the heat transfer fluid to the inlet of the cell is provided, to allow preheating of the incoming gas. However, this patent application US 2009/0263680 A1 does not plan to recover the excess heat produced by the SOFC stack other than through the downstream turbine producing electricity. In addition, it does not indicate by what means the heat transfer fluid dissipates the heat within the stack. The invention concerned in this document is moreover specific to on-board systems, therefore of low power, in contrast to stationary systems of medium and / or high power. In addition, the on-board system described in patent application US 2009/0263680 A1 is not intended to operate at high pressures, but on the contrary uses slightly pressurized ambient air or air pressurized by flow of the air around the pile. In addition, patent application US 2004/0081859 A1 further describes an SOFC cell capable of storing heat used in a heat storage material in discharge mode, then of using it to heat the water to be electrolyzed in charge mode . In addition, several publications deal with tests of hydrogen fuel cell systems. For example, the article entitled "Coupling and thermal integration of a solid oxide fuel cell with a magnesium hydride tank", B. Delhomme, A. Lanzini, International journal of hydrogen energy, 2013, 38, 4740-4747, envisages coupling a hydrogen cell with a hydride tank, while providing for total recirculation of the hydrogen not consumed after condensation of the water created by the electrochemical reaction within the cell. It thus seems possible to have a hydrogen system conversion rate close to 100%. However, this solution has only been designed for low pressure operation, and is not concerned with recompression work on recirculated hydrogen. The thermal integration is succinct. An arrangement is provided to allow heat recovery for desorption, but it involves the combustion of unreacted hydrogen at the outlet of the cell, rather than aiming for a conversion rate of 100%. There is still a need to improve the management of the thermal operating regimes of a high temperature water electrolyzer (EHT) and of a solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC), in particular in order to compensate for the exothermicity of the reactions. envisaged, especially during operation under pressure. STATEMENT OF THE INVENTION The object of the invention is to at least partially remedy the needs mentioned above and the drawbacks relating to the embodiments of the prior art. The subject of the invention is therefore, according to one of its aspects, a reversible electrolysis system for water at high temperature, characterized in that it comprises: a device forming a reversible high temperature electrolyser, configured to operate according to a solid oxide electrolyser mode of the SOEC type, for the production of hydrogen and thus the storage of electricity, and / or according to a fuel cell mode with solid oxide of the SOFC type, for the consumption of hydrogen and thus the destocking of electricity, said reversible electrolyser being configured to operate under a pressure of between 2 and 15 bars, in particular between 8 and 12 bars, - a hydride tank, thermally coupled with said reversible electrolyser, configured to store hydrogen in the form of hydrides in solid oxide electrolyser mode of the SOEC type of said reversible electrolyser and / or to release hydrogen in mode SOFC type solid oxide fuel cell of said reversible electrolyser, the system being configured to allow, when the reversible electrolyser is configured to operate according to a SOEC type solid oxide electrolyser mode, recovery of the heat released by the hydride reservoir during the absorption of hydrogen to produce pressurized water vapor intended to enter the reversible electrolyser, and to allow, when the reversible electrolyser is configured to operate in a battery mode at solid oxide fuel of the SOFC type, recovery of the heat given off by the outgoing stream (s) of the reverse electrolyser ble to allow the desorption of hydrogen from the hydride tank. Advantageously, the operation of the system according to the invention makes it possible to limit the work of compression of gases, in particular hydrogen, since only liquid water is compressed. The system according to the invention may also include a compressor intended to compress the liquid water. This thus improves yields compared to a system operating the reversible electrolyser at atmospheric pressure. The operation of the electrolyser under pressure also makes it possible to improve its performance, in particular by reducing the phenomena of diffusion limit of the reactive species within the cells. The reversible electrolysis system according to the invention may also include one or more of the following characteristics taken in isolation or according to any possible technical combination. By the expressions “reversible electrolysis” and “reversible electrolyser”, it is meant respectively that the electrochemical reaction of electrolysis of water at high temperature (EHT) can be carried out in one direction and / or the other, namely that 'It can allow the production of hydrogen and / or the consumption of hydrogen depending on the operating mode of the system, and that the reversible electrolyser can operate according to a storage mode and / or a destocking mode. More specifically, in the storage mode, it allows the production of hydrogen and therefore the storage of electrical energy. Conversely, in the destocking mode, it allows the consumption of hydrogen and therefore the destocking (or even the restitution) of electrical energy. In addition, throughout the description, the terms “upstream” and “downstream” are to be considered with respect to the direction of flow of the flow considered, namely from upstream to downstream. Of course, the system according to the invention can be of modular design. In particular, it may include a plurality of reversible electrolysers and / or hydride tanks. Thus, all or part of these electrolysers and / or hydride tanks can be activated, depending in particular on the desired power range. The reversible electrolyser may very particularly comprise a stack of elementary electrochemical cells with solid oxides each formed by a cathode, an anode and an electrolyte interposed between the cathode and the anode, and a plurality of electrical interconnectors and fluidics each arranged between two adjacent elementary cells. Each interconnector can be conventional as described in the prior art or of the so-called “three-flow” type. In particular, each interconnector can integrate a stack architecture allowing heat exchange between the cathode and anode gases with a third separate fluid having the role of heat transfer fluid. This heat transfer fluid can circulate in the enclosure, provided that the stack has an architecture allowing suitable heat exchange, as proposed, inter alia, in patent application US 2006/0105213 A1 or international application WO 2013/060869 A1, previously described. This heat transfer fluid can also circulate within the stack in separate channels, as proposed in patent application GB 2 151 840 A, described above. It should also be noted that the enclosure makes it possible to work under pressure, the latter notably complying with Directive DESP97 / 23 / EC to allow working between 2 and 15 bars. In addition, the reversible electrolyser can be configured to operate according to a solid oxide electrolyser mode of the SOEC type, and the system can then include a steam generator, intended to produce the steam to the electrolyser reversible by means of the heat given off by the hydride reservoir, during the absorption of hydrogen, and brought to the steam generator by means of a heat transfer fluid. The system may also include one or more heat exchangers allowing preheating of the system inlet water and / or superheating of the water vapor entering the reversible electrolyser, via the hydrogen flows. and oxygen leaving the reversible electrolyser. The system may in particular include heat exchangers upstream and downstream of the steam generator to respectively allow the preheating of the water entering the system and the superheating of the steam entering the reversible electrolyser , through the hydrogen and oxygen flows leaving the reversible electrolyser. The system may further include a condenser, coupled to a phase separator, for receiving the unreacted water vapor in the reversible electrolyser and the dihydrogen produced by the reversible electrolyser and for condensing the unreacted water to allow recycling within the system. The dihydrogen produced can then be collected in the phase separator and sent to the hydride tank. The system may also include a compression pump, intended to compress the water entering the system to a pressure between 2 and 15 bars, in particular 8 and 12 bars. The system can also include an electric heater upstream of the reversible electrolyser, ensuring additional overheating of the water vapor, in particular up to 800 ° C. The system can also include a dryer, upstream of the hydride tank and downstream of the condenser, intended to make it possible to remove the moisture contained in the dihydrogen before storage in the hydride tank. The system can also include a cold group connected to the condenser, upstream of the phase separator, intended to ensure the condensation of the unreacted water vapor coming from the reversible electrolyser. Furthermore, the reversible electrolyser can also be configured to operate according to a solid oxide fuel cell mode of the SOFC type under pressure, and the system can then include at least one heat exchanger, intended to preheat at least one incoming flow. in the reversible electrolyser by means of at least one flow leaving the reversible electrolyser. The reversible electrolyser can be configured to operate in a SOFC type solid oxide fuel cell mode, and the system can also include at least one heat exchanger, intended to recover high temperature heat from at least one flow leaving the reversible electrolyser through at least one heat transfer fluid, in particular to allow the desorption of hydrogen from the hydride tank. Advantageously, there is no depressurization between the SOFC type solid oxide fuel cell mode and the SOEC type solid oxide electrolyser mode. The reversible chlorinator can be configured to operate in a solid oxide fuel cell mode of the SOFC type, and the system can be of the “compressed air recirculation system” type, consisting of a dihydrogen circuit and a primary circuit. of air. The reversible electrolyser can be configured to operate in a solid oxide fuel cell mode of the SOFC type, and the system can also be of the “three-flow system” type, consisting of a dihydrogen circuit, a primary air circuit. and a cooling circuit using a “three-flow” type interconnector. The dihydrogen circuit can include: means for mixing the hydrogen coming from the hydride tank with the total recycling of the hydrogen not consumed in the reversible electrolyser over a pressure range of 2 to 15 bars, - a heat exchanger, intended to preheat the flow of dihydrogen entering the reversible electrolyser through the flow of dihydrogen leaving the reversible electrolyser, - A heat exchanger, forming a heat recovery unit, intended to recover high temperature heat from the flow of dihydrogen leaving the reversible electrolyser by means of at least one heat transfer fluid. The system may also include a heat exchanger, intended to cool the flow of dihydrogen leaving the heat exchanger, forming a heat recovery unit, by the flow of hydrogen leaving a phase separator, allowing the recovery of the produced water. In the case of a system of the “recirculating compressed air system” type, the primary air circuit may include: - an air compressor to have air between 2 and 15 bars, - a heat exchanger, intended to preheat the air flow entering the reversible electrolyser by means of the air flow leaving the reversible electrolyser, - A heat exchanger, forming a heat recovery unit, intended to recover high temperature heat from the air flow leaving the reversible electrolyser by means of at least one heat transfer fluid. The system can also include means for mixing the air flow leaving the heat exchanger, forming a heat recovery unit, with additional oxygen forming a total air flow entering the electrolyser reversible at pressure. from 2 to 15 bars. The system can also include: - a heat exchanger and a cooling device, making it possible to cool the total flow of air mixed by the mixing means, - a compression pump, making it possible to compress the air leaving the cooling device before injection into the heat exchanger for its preheating. This pump compensates for system pressure losses and raises the pressure to the correct inlet level (2 to 15 bars). In the case of a “three-flow” type system, the primary air circuit can include: - an air compressor to have air between 2 and 15 bars, - a heat exchanger, intended to preheat the flow of compressed air entering the reversible electrolyser by means of the air flow leaving the reversible electrolyser, - A heat exchanger, forming a heat recovery unit, intended to recover high temperature heat from the air flow leaving the reversible electrolyser by means of at least one heat transfer fluid. In the case of a “three-stream” type system, the cooling circuit can also include: - a heat exchanger, intended to preheat the flow of pressurized coolant entering the reversible electrolyser by means of the hot flow leaving the reversible electrolyser, a heat exchanger, forming a heat recovery unit, intended for recovering high temperature heat from the hot flow leaving the reversible electrolyser by means of at least one heat transfer fluid, a heat exchanger and a cooling device, also designated by super-cooling device, intended to cool the hot flow leaving the heat exchanger, - a compression pump, intended to compress the flow leaving the heat exchanger and the super-cooling device, to form a flow of compressed fluid over the range of 2 to 15 bars to cool the hot flow leaving the heat exchanger. This pump only compensates for system pressure losses and raises the pressure to the correct inlet level (2 to 15 bars). Furthermore, another subject of the invention is, according to another of its aspects, a process for storing and / or destocking electricity by reversible electrolysis of water at high temperature, characterized in that it is set in works by means of a reversible electrolysis system of water at high temperature as defined above, and in that it comprises the steps of: - when the reversible pressurized electrolyser operates in a solid oxide electrolyser mode of the SOEC type, recovery of the heat released by the hydride tank during the absorption of hydrogen to produce the water vapor under pressure intended to enter the reversible electrolyser, and - when the reversible pressurized electrolyser is configured to operate according to a solid oxide fuel cell mode of the SOFC type, recovery of the heat released by the outgoing stream (s) of the reversible electrolyser to allow the desorption of hydrogen of the hydride tank. The method can be implemented according to an electricity storage mode, the reversible high temperature electrolyser being configured to operate according to a solid oxide electrolyser type of SOEC type, and the method can include the step of carrying out the high temperature electrolysis reaction of pressurized water vapor to produce hydrogen and thus store electricity. The method can particularly be implemented according to the storage mode by means of a reversible electrolysis system of water at high temperature, and can comprise the following successive stages: - introduction of total water from the system, comprising injection water and recycled water from the phase separator, into the compression pump up to a pressure between 2 and 15 bars, in particular between 8 and 12 bars, - circulation of the total water of the system through heat exchangers to allow preheating of the water entering the system by means of the hydrogen and oxygen flows leaving the reversible electrolyser, - introduction of the system inlet water into the steam generator, to produce pressurized steam for the reversible electrolyser by means of the heat released by the hydride tank, during the absorption of hydrogen, and brought to the steam generator by a heat transfer fluid, - circulation of water vapor through heat exchangers to allow the water vapor to overheat before entering the reversible electrolyser, via the hydrogen and oxygen flows leaving the reversible electrolyser, - additional superheating of the steam in order to reach the working temperature of the electrolyser using an electric heater, - introduction of pressurized steam into the reversible electrolyser for the production of hydrogen and oxygen flows, - cooling of the hydrogen and oxygen flows through the heat exchangers, - condensation of unreacted pressurized steam in the phase separator to produce recycling water reintroduced into the system, - storage of the dried hydrogen product in the hydride tank. Advantageously, there is no compression of the hydrogen between the electrolyser and the tank. The method can also be implemented according to a mode of destocking of electricity, the reversible high temperature electrolyser being configured to operate according to a solid oxide fuel cell mode of the SOFC type under pressure, and the method can comprise the stage of carrying out the reverse reaction of high temperature electrolysis of water vapor to consume hydrogen and thus destock electricity. The method can also be particularly implemented according to the destocking mode by means of a reversible electrolysis system of water at high temperature of the “compressed air recirculation system” type, and can comprise the following successive steps: • for the dihydrogen circuit: - mixing of the hydrogen coming from the hydride tank at the targeted pressure of 2 to 15 bars, with the total recycling of the hydrogen not consumed in the reversible electrolyser by means of mixing, - injection of total hydrogen through the heat exchanger allowing its preheating by the flow of hydrogen leaving the reversible electrolyser, - injection of total hydrogen into the reversible electrolyser for its consumption and the production of water, electricity and heat, - cooling of the hydrogen flow leaving the reversible electrolyser by the preheating heat exchanger, - cooling of the hydrogen flow leaving the preheating heat exchanger by the heat exchanger, forming a heat recovery unit, making it possible to recover the heat by exchanging it with a heat transfer fluid, - separation between the flow of hydrogen and the flow of water produced from the condenser, - recycling of hydrogen not consumed by only recompressing it with the value of the pressure drops, • for the primary air circuit: - injection of air leaving the reversible electrolyser through the cooling heat exchanger to be cooled by the compressed air entering the reversible electrolyser, injection of the air leaving the cooling heat exchanger through the heat exchanger, forming a heat recovery unit, traversed by a heat transfer fluid, mixing of the air leaving the heat exchanger, forming a heat recovery unit, by means of mixing with an additional flow of compressed oxygen, injection of this mixture into a heat exchanger, then a cooling device, then a compression pump to compensate for the pressure losses and to obtain compressed air injected into this cooling heat exchanger downstream of the mixing means , - injection of air from the cooling heat exchanger into the heat exchanger for preheating, then injection into the reversible electrolyser at the target pressure of 2 to 15 bars. The process can also be particularly implemented according to the destocking mode by means of a reversible electrolysis system under pressure of high temperature water of the “three-flow system” type, and can comprise the following successive steps: • for the dihydrogen circuit: mixing of the hydrogen coming from the hydride tank with the total recycling of the hydrogen not consumed in the reversible electrolyser by means of the mixing means, - injection of total hydrogen at the target pressure of 2 to 15 bars through the heat exchanger allowing its preheating by the flow of hydrogen leaving the reversible electrolyser, - injection of total hydrogen at the target pressure of 2 to 15 bars in the reversible electrolyser for its consumption and the production of water, electricity and heat, - cooling of the hydrogen flow leaving the reversible electrolyser by the preheating heat exchanger, - cooling of the hydrogen flow leaving the preheating heat exchanger by the heat exchanger, forming a heat recovery unit, making it possible to recover the heat by exchanging it with a heat transfer fluid, - separation between the flow of hydrogen and the flow of produced water from the phase separator, - recycling of hydrogen not consumed by only recompressing it with the value of the pressure drops in the assembly, • for the primary air circuit: - injection of ambient air into a compression pump up to a pressure between 2 and 15 bars, in particular between 8 and 12 bars, - preheating of the air entering the preheating heat exchanger via the air flow leaving the reversible electrolyser, - injection of preheated incoming air into the reversible electrolyser at the target pressure, - cooling of the air leaving the reversible electrolyser in the preheating heat exchanger, cooling of the air leaving the preheating heat exchanger through the heat exchanger, forming a heat recovery unit, in order to obtain heat by means of at least one heat transfer fluid, - injection of the air leaving the heat exchanger, forming a heat recovery unit, in a gas turbine to eject the outgoing air, • cooling circuit: - cooling of the hot flow leaving the reversible electrolyser through the preheating heat exchanger by the fluid entering the reversible electrolyser, - cooling of the flow leaving the preheating heat exchanger in the heat exchanger, forming a heat recovery unit, by means of at least one heat transfer fluid, - total cooling of the flow leaving the heat exchanger, forming a heat recovery unit, in a heat exchanger by the flow of recompressed fluid, injection of the flow leaving the heat exchanger through which the flow of recompressed fluid flows into a cooling device, also designated by super-cooling device, then a compression pump, preheating of the flow leaving the compression pump by the flow leaving the reversible electrolyser before it enters the reversible electrolyser at the target pressure of 2 to 15 bars, in particular 8 to 12 bars. The reversible pressure electrolysis system and the electrolysis process according to the invention may include any of the characteristics set out in the description, taken in isolation or in any technically possible combination with other characteristics. BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS The invention will be better understood on reading the detailed description which follows, of nonlimiting examples of implementation thereof, as well as on examining the figures, schematic and partial, of the appended drawing, on which : FIG. 1 is a schematic view showing the operating principle of a high temperature solid oxide electrolyser (SOEC), FIG. 2 is an exploded schematic view of part of a high temperature solid oxide electrolyser (SOEC) comprising interconnectors according to the prior art, FIG. 3 is an exploded schematic view of part of a solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC) comprising interconnectors according to the prior art, - Figure 4 is a block diagram showing an example of a reversible electrolysis system of high temperature water according to the invention, comprising a reversible high temperature electrolyser, operating according to a solid oxide electrolyser type SOEC, - Figure 5 shows, in graphical form, the evolution of the PCI efficiency of a system according to the invention operating in hydrogen production mode and with a nominal value of 116 kW AC, as a function of the electric power total consumed, - Figure 6 is a block diagram showing the dihydrogen circuit of an example of a system called "recirculating compressed air" of reversible electrolysis of water at high temperature according to the invention, comprising a reversible electrolyser high temperature, operating in a solid oxide fuel cell mode of the SOFC type, FIG. 7 is a block diagram representing the primary air circuit of the system of FIG. 6, FIG. 8 represents, in graphical form, the evolution of the air flow rate of a system according to the invention as a function of the net electrical power of the process corresponding to FIGS. 6 and 7, and of a nominal power of 64 kW, FIG. 9 represents, in graphical form, the evolution of the PCI efficiency of the method of FIG. 8 as a function of the net electric power of the method, FIG. 10 represents, in graphical form, the evolution of the dihydrogen consumption of the process of FIG. 8 as a function of the net electric power of the process, FIG. 11 is a block diagram representing the dihydrogen circuit of an example of a so-called “three-flow” system for reversible electrolysis of water at high temperature according to the invention, comprising a reversible high temperature electrolyser, operating in a SOFC type solid oxide fuel cell mode, FIG. 12 is a block diagram representing the primary air circuit of the system of FIG. 11, FIG. 13 is a block diagram representing the cooling circuit of the system of FIG. 11, FIG. 14 represents, in graphic form, the evolution of the primary air and cooling air flow rates of a system according to the invention as a function of the net electric power of the corresponding process, FIG. 15 represents, in graphical form, the evolution of the PCI efficiency of the process of FIG. 14 as a function of the net electric power of the process (AC), and - Figure 16 shows, in graphical form, the evolution of the consumption of dihydrogen as a function of the net power of the process of Figure 14. Throughout these figures, identical references can designate identical or analogous elements. In addition, the different parts shown in the figures are not necessarily shown on a uniform scale, to make the figures more readable. DETAILED PRESENTATION OF PARTICULAR EMBODIMENTS Figures 1 to 3 have already been described previously in the section relating to the state of the prior art and the technical context of the invention. It is specified that, for all the figures, the symbols and arrows for supplying water vapor H 2 O, for distributing and recovering dihydrogen H 2 , oxygen O 2 , air and electric current, are shown for clarity and precision, to illustrate the operation of the devices shown. In addition, it should be noted that all the constituents (anode / electrolyte / cathode) of a given electrolysis cell are ceramics. The operating temperature of a high temperature electrolyser is moreover typically between 600 and 1000 ° C. Referring to Figure 4, there is shown in the form of a block diagram an example of a system 10 for reversible electrolysis of water at high temperature according to the invention, comprising a reversible high temperature electrolyser 11, operating according to a solid oxide electrolyser mode of the SOEC type for the production of hydrogen and thus the storage of electricity. In addition, the system 10 operates at a pressure between 2 and 15 bars, or even between 8 and 12 bars. The reversible electrolyser 11 is thermally coupled to a hydride reservoir 12, making it possible to store the hydrogen in the form of hydrides. The operating principle of the system 10 according to the invention shown in FIG. 4 will be described later in the part relating to the storage mode. The system 10 for reversible electrolysis of water at high temperature according to the invention can have several possibilities of use. In particular, and without limitation, the system 10 can operate in a reversible mode, that is to say both for the storage and the destocking of electricity. In this case, a massive storage of electricity can be carried out before its restitution by reversibility of the electrolysis process. The system 10 can also operate in a non-reversible mode, that is to say in an operation such that it is dedicated to only one of the two possible directions of the electrochemical electrolysis reaction. More specifically, the system 10 can thus operate in a storage mode only: then, the system is similar to a station dedicated to the production of hydrogen filling the hydride reservoir 12 as well as to the supply of oxygen or d enriched air. In this case, the system can for example serve as a charging station for a hydrogen vehicle, such as a construction machine. The system 10 can still operate in a destocking mode only: then, the system is similar to a station dedicated to the production of electricity, which can be supplied with hydrogen coming from the hydride reservoir 12 and / or another process. . If hydrogen from another process is used, the latter can be injected via the hydride tank, in which case it acts as a buffer tank, or directly downstream of the hydrides. In the case where hydrogen from a hydride type storage is not used, the heat recovered on the exchangers 31, 39 (case of the air recirculation system, Figures 6 and 7) or 31 , 42 and 91 (case of the 3-flow system, Figures 11, 12 and 13) must be removed, and can be used in other processes external to the system. When the system 10 is used in a non-reversible operating mode, either for the storage of electricity or for the destocking of electricity, certain elements of the system 10 may not be used, in particular certain exchanger networks. We will now describe below, with reference to FIGS. 4 to 16, the two main operating modes of the system 10 according to the invention, namely the storage mode and the destocking mode. More specifically, Figures 4 and 5 relate to the operation of the system 10 according to the storage mode, and Figures 6 to 16 relate to the operation of the system 10 according to the destocking mode. Storage mode The electricity storage mode of the system 10 according to the invention uses the reversible electrolyser 11 in an operating configuration of a solid oxide electrolyser of the SOEC type. As shown in FIG. 4 and in accordance with the preceding description of this type of electrolyser, the SOEC electrolyser 11 comprises a stack of elementary electrochemical cells with solid oxides each formed by a cathode, which are generally called cathode C of l SOEC electrolyser 11, of an anode, which are generally called anode A of SOEC electrolyser 11, of an electrolyte interposed between the cathode and the anode of each cell, and a plurality of electrical and fluidic interconnectors each arranged between two adjacent elementary cells, which are generally called the three-flow interconnector F3 of the SOEC electrolyser 11. However, preferably, this three-flow interconnector F3 is not used in the storage mode of system 10 according to the invention. Also, the parts relating to the operation of the three-flow interconnector F3 are shown in dotted lines in FIG. 4. Solid oxide electrolysers of the SOEC type are capable of operating with or without air scavenging on the oxygen production side. They are thus able to supply almost pure oxygen as well as enriched air, as required. In the example of system 10 described here, it is considered that there is no air sweep in storage mode, which avoids the compression of this gas for the envisaged pressure operation, and that therefore the production of compressed and almost pure oxygen is obtained. The purpose of the storage mode of the system 10 according to the invention is to produce hydrogen under pressure, which is then stored in the hydride tank 12, from electricity. Advantageously, the SOEC 11 electrolyser is configured to operate under a pressure ranging from 2 to 15 bars, or even from 8 to 12 bars. Indeed, working under pressure in the SOEC 11 electrolyser makes it possible to limit the compression work of the hydrogen created, since compressing liquid water requires much less energy than compressing the hydrogen. However, it is possible to work on the electrolyser at a pressure different from that of the storage. This variant would however require a compressor (case where the storage is at a pressure higher than the electrolyser) or an expansion valve (case where the storage is at a lower pressure) between the electrolyser and the storage. The hydrogen absorption heat in the hydride would in any case be used to meet the needs of the steam generator. Operation in storage mode is described below. Thus, as shown in FIG. 4, the demineralized water H2O, represented by the arrow Fh2o, is mixed in Ml with the recovery water FbOrécup from the process, coming from the phase separator 13. Then, all of FbOtotai of this water H2O + FbOrécup is compressed by a compression pump 14 up to the working pressure, between 2 and 15 bars, or even 8 and 12 bars. The total water FbOtotai is then separated into two streams fl and f2 by a separator 15, each stream fl, f2 being respectively preheated to saturation by heat exchangers 16 and 17 respectively traversed by oxygen streams O2 and d hydrogen lukewarm. The water preheated through the two heat exchangers 16 and 17 is then remixed into M2, then brought to a boil in a steam generator 18 by means of the heat recovered in the hydride tank 12, during the absorption of hydrogen (for example, approximately 75 kJ / mole for a hydride of the magnesium hydride type), by means of a heat transfer fluid FC. It is also necessary to choose a metal hydride and a pressure range of the system 10 such that the heat given off by the hydride is at a temperature higher than that of the boiling point of water at the pressure considered at the input d electrolyser, for example magnesium hydride is at sorption equilibrium at 380 ° C. at 10 bars. The water vapor is then separated again into two streams f3 and f4 by a separator 19, each stream f3, f4 being respectively superheated to between 670 and 750 ° C by heat exchangers 20 and 21 respectively crossed by flow of hot O2 oxygen and H2 hydrogen, leaving the SOEC 11 electrolyser. The two flows f3 and f4 of superheated steam are then remixed in M3, then an electric heater 22 ensures that steam overheating ends until 700 to 800 ° C of operation of the SOEC 11 chlorinator before entering it. The oxygen O 2 and the hydrogen H 2 , respectively coming from the anode A and from the cathode C, are firstly cooled by the heat exchangers 20 and 21 respectively with the water vapor entering the streams f3 and f4, then respectively by the heat exchangers 16 and 17 with the water from the streams fl and f2. As regards oxygen O 2 , this is stored or evacuated, represented by the arrow F02. As regards the hydrogen H 2 , a condenser 23 ensures the condensation of the unreacted vapor, and this water is then collected in the phase separator 13 before being sent towards the start of the process in Ml for its recycling. The hydrogen H 2 ends up being dried in a dryer 24 before being sent to the hydride tank 12 to be stored there, which then produces heat recovered by the heat transfer fluid loop FC for the generator. vapor 18. The dryer 24 can be of different types, such as a silica gel or a cryogenic trap. However, it must be able to remove the moisture present in the hydrogen H 2 before it enters the hydride storage tank 12. In fact, these compounds reacting strongly with water, this could damage the tank 12 and create a strong release of heat. It should be noted that the system 10 can also operate with an SOEC electrolyser 11 in exothermic mode, namely that the gases leaving the cells are hotter than those entering them, in which case the electric heater 22 is not necessary during the operation of the SOEC 11 chlorinator. It should be noted that the system 10 can also operate with an SOEC electrolyser 11 in endothermic mode, namely that the gases leaving the cells are colder than those entering them, in which case the electric heater 22 operates at a higher power for compensate for. Advantageously, the thermal coupling between the SOEC electrolyser 11 and the hydride tank 12 provides several advantages. In particular, it makes it possible to supply the energy requirement of the steam generator 18, and thus makes it possible not to have to resort to a source external to the system 10, of the electrical type or by combustion of gas, which then makes it possible to increase the yield of the electrolysis process in storage mode. In addition, such a thermal coupling also makes it possible to avoid having to remove heat from the hydride reservoir 12, as is the case with the coupling between hydride reservoir and electrolysis at low temperature. This would otherwise have a non-negligible cost in energy, which can lower the yield of the process if no means of storing this heat is used, in which case a heat dissipation, such as an air-cooling tower, would be necessary. Advantageously, the electrolysis is carried out under pressure to avoid any compression of hydrogen before storage in the tank. Example of realization The reversible high temperature electrolyser 11 comprises an enclosure containing the stacks. We will now describe an exemplary embodiment of a SOEC electrolyser 11 thermally coupled to a hydride tank 12 in storage mode. The different values quoted in the following example come from simulations carried out on the ProsimPlus software from thermodynamic models of electrolysis cells as well as auxiliaries (pumps, converters, etc.). The purpose of the system 10 of this example is to provide hydrogen absorbed on magnesium hydride Mghh. The hydrides are stored in the hydrides reservoir 12 at a pressure of 10 bars. The power range of the system in production mode is between 115 and 116.5 kW, and the range of system outputs obtained is between 86.4 and 87.5% PCI (ratio between the lower calorific value of the hydrogen gas created and system power consumption). The yield of the electrolyser stack alone is 97.5% PCI. The system 10 therefore comprises a hydrogen storage by hydrides of the magnesium hydride type Mghh. It absorbs cold hydrogen, at around 35 ° C, under a pressure of 10 bars, which releases an energy of 75 kW / mole H2 in the form of heat. The heat given off by the absorption of hydrogen is recovered on a loop of heat transfer fluid FC, comprising oil, in order to supply the steam generator 18. The utilization rate in the electrolyser 11 is maintained sufficiently high, greater than about 60%, so that the storage in the hydride tank 12 generates enough heat to supply the steam generator 18 completely, namely total boiling of the water with overheating of 10 ° C. The electrolyser 11 is controlled at the thermoneutral voltage in this example, with flow rates in the acceptable terminals of the cells, ie from 12 to 48 NmL / min / cm 2 . There is therefore no scanning on the anode side, the oxygen produced being substantially pure. There is no problem of cooling in the cells, the thermoneutral regime making it possible to obtain an electrolyzer outlet temperature 11 equal to that of the inlet. The third channel of the three-flow interconnector, represented by F3 in FIG. 4, is not used here. The fact of restricting itself to the thermoneutral voltage has the effect of limiting the range of power accessible to the system in storage mode compared to an operation in endothermic or exothermic mode which offer a more extensive accessible range. In the efficiency calculations for system 10, the total heat of combustion that could potentially be released by the hydrogen produced with (PCS) or without (PCI) condensation of the water generated with electrical energy (AC) was compared. required for its production at the complete system level. The lower calorific values (PCI) and higher (PCS) of hydrogen are 244 and 286 kJ / mol respectively. FIG. 5 represents, in graphical form, the evolution of the efficiency R of the system 10 operating in hydrogen production mode for a system with a nominal value of 116 kW AC, as a function of the total electrical power consumed De, expressed in kW AC. The yield R for the PCI curve is more precisely calculated with the following formula: R = [flow rate of Hh created * PCI] / Power consumption. The electrical consumption taken into account in the yields includes the consumption of the electrolysis cells themselves, to which are added the consumption of the auxiliaries (pumps, hot and cold groups and power electronics). Thus, the assembly of the system 10 in storage mode makes it possible to valorize the heat of absorption of the hydrogen on the hydride in an efficient manner, by providing a heat source to supply the steam generator 18, which allows savings on electricity consumption of at least 15% compared to processes using low temperature electrolysis (PEM, alkaline), which must remove this heat. This, coupled with the higher electrical efficiency of high temperature electrolysis compared to low temperature processes, explains the indicated high values of yields. The yield is also higher than a conventional system because a hydrogen is produced which is absorbed in the hydride, which releases the heat used to supply the steam generator. In the case of a system without heat supplied by the hydride, it would be necessary to supply the system by means of a hot utility the heat required by the steam generator, which would lower the PCI and PCS yields by 15 and 17 points respectively. about. Clearance mode The electricity destocking mode of the system 10 according to the invention uses the reversible electrolyser 11 in an operating configuration of a solid oxide fuel cell of the SOFC type. In this destocking mode, the aim is to consume hydrogen in the fuel cell 11 under a pressure of between approximately 2 and 15 bars, with the objectives of supplying electricity with a high efficiency, and possibly of supplying low-temperature heat to supply a heating network, such as a dwelling, an agricultural drier, among others. In the destocking mode, the system 10 can take the form of two separate systems, respectively called the air recirculation system and the three-flow system. They are detailed below. Air recirculation system This system 10 is illustrated using FIGS. 6 and 7. In this case, the system 10 does not have an interconnector of the three-flow type. As can be seen in FIGS. 6 and 7, the fuel cell 11 comprises an anode A and a cathode C, as described above, but no third heat transfer fluid channel. In this system 10, the cooling of the fuel cell 11 is only ensured by the flow of compressed air on the cathode side, which is therefore expected to be significant due to the exothermicity of the oxidation reaction of hydrogen. The desorption of hydrogen in the hydride tank is ensured by the collection of heat on the outlet fluids. The operation of the H2 hydrogen circuit is successively detailed below, then the operation of the primary air circuit. Dihydroqene H2 circuit This circuit is illustrated with reference to FIG. 6. In this FIG. 6, the parts in dotted lines refer to the primary air circuit detailed below with reference to FIG. 7. Advantageously, the dihydrogen circuit H2 forms a loop allowing the recycling of the hydrogen not consumed in the fuel cell 11. A conversion close to 100% of the hydrogen is thus obtained. The operation of the dihydrogen circuit H2 in the destocking mode of an air recirculation system 10 is described below. The hydrogen H2, coming from the hydride reservoir 12, under a pressure of 2 to 15 bars, or even from 8 to 12 bars, is mixed in Ml with the total recycling of the hbrésiduei hydrogen not consumed in the fuel cell 11 . The total flow of hydrogen Fbtotai then passes through a heat exchanger 30 to be preheated by the outlet gases H2 from the fuel cell 11. Then, it is injected into the fuel cell 11 to be oxidized there and produce water, electricity and heat. At the outlet of the fuel cell 11, the hydrogen flow H2 is cooled through the heat exchanger 30 by the inlet gases hbtotai, then it passes through a heat exchanger 31, forming a heat recovery unit more of 400 ° C, allowing heat to be recovered by exchanging it with a heat transfer fluid FC, such as oil, air, steam, among others. The flow of hydrogen H2 and water vapor passes through a heat exchanger to be cooled by the flow of hydrogen H2 leaving a phase separator 34. After passing through the heat exchanger 33, the flow H2 passes through a condenser 35, then the phase separator 34 to allow the recovery of the water H 2 O produced, represented by the arrow Fh 2 o, and allow its evacuation for a possible valuation. At the outlet of the separator 34, the dry hydrogen H 2 , which may contain some traces of water, is heated by the incoming flow of hydrogen H 2 passing through the heat exchanger 33, then is sent to a compression pump 36 to compensate for the pressure drops in the circuit, before being mixed in Ml with the hydrogen coming from the hydride tank 12. The hydride tank 12 can have any type of tank capable of restoring hydrogen in the desired temperature ranges, of the order of 300 to 400 ° C., and in the desired pressure ranges, of the order of 2 to ten bars. However, the hydrides must have a sufficient hydride absorption temperature to serve the steam generator 18 in storage mode and the battery must give off sufficient heat to allow the desorption of the quantity of hydrogen required at its point of operation. The H 2 dihydrogen circuit can also include a purge valve, in order to be able to eliminate any neutral gases, such as nitrogen or argon, possibly present in the hydrogen in the storage. Primary air circuit This circuit is illustrated with reference to FIG. 7. In this FIG. 7, the parts in dotted lines refer to the dihydrogen circuit H 2 detailed previously with reference to FIG. 6. The primary circuit of compressed air is intended to supply the fuel cell 11 with oxygen O 2 , as well as remove the heat produced by the cell 11. The operation of the primary compressed air circuit in destocking mode of an air recirculation system 10 is described below. The air leaving the fuel cell 11 passes through a heat exchanger 38 to be cooled by the air entering the fuel cell 11. Then, the air flow passes through a heat exchanger 39, forming a heat recovery unit at more than 400 ° C., itself traversed by a heat transfer fluid FC comprising oil. The air is then mixed in Ml with a flow of oxygen O 2 , represented by the arrow F02, then cooled through a heat exchanger 40 with recompressed air, and in a second cooling device 41 until 'at the recompression temperature, then compressed in a compression pump 42. The recompression is only of the value of the pressure drops and not of a complete recompression of 2 to 15 bars that one would have if one did not recirculate the air, which presents a substantial gain on the basis of the invention. The compressed air is then brought to inlet temperature in the fuel cell 11 by passage through the heat exchangers 40 and 38, before being injected into the cathode C. Depending on the hydrides used, and the desired operating ranges, the heat recovered for desorption may be insufficient. The addition of a hydrogen-powered burner allowing the FC coolant to recover the missing heat can then be considered. A backup electric heater is also usable, but less efficient, since the cost of electricity can be high during operation in destocking mode, and this will impact the performance of the system. Furthermore, if additional heat is required to be recovered from the high temperature exchangers 38 and 39 described above, part of the hydrogen can be burned in a combustion chamber located upstream of the exchanger under consideration. This combustion chamber may for example be located upstream of the heat exchanger 39 of the primary air circuit, this making it possible not to add an exchanger on the heat transfer fluid circuit FC, but necessitates the condensation of the water thus created before recompression. The latter being carried out cold, this can cause limited design problems. The combustion chamber can also be located on a burner independent of the hydrogen and air circuits, this assembly being simple to apply but less energy efficient because the air will have to be preheated under penalty of limiting the share of energy. of combustion collected by the heat transfer fluid FC. Advantageously, the air recirculation system allows the production of electricity, potentially decarbonized and / or renewable depending on the origin of the electricity to produce hydrogen in storage mode. In addition, it allows the production of heat at high temperature, required for the desorption of hydrogen in the hydride tank 12, with the possibility of burning a little hydrogen if the fuel cell 11 does not supply it. enough of itself. This eliminates the need for a high temperature heat source external to the system 10. In addition, it allows a range of electrical and / or thermal power achievable which is wide around the nominal, or here 75 to 100%. Finally, a slight improvement in efficiency is obtained compared to a three-flow system, described below, due to the lower air compression thanks to its recirculation associated with enrichment in O 2 . In the three-flow system, only part of the air is recycled. Example of realization We will now describe an exemplary embodiment of a SOFC fuel cell 11 thermally coupled to a hydride tank 12 in destocking mode with a system 10 with air recirculation. The different values quoted in the following example come from simulations carried out on the ProsimPlus software from thermodynamic models of battery cells as well as auxiliaries (pumps, converters, etc.). The purpose of the system 10 in this example is to provide electricity with high efficiency and a wide power range. The hydrides are stored in the hydrides reservoir 12 at a pressure of 10 bars. The range of power for producing electricity (AC, injectable on the network) is between 49.5 and 65.3 kW, being between 51.2 and 68.2 kW for fuel cell 11 (with PCI efficiency varying from 72% for operation at minimum power to 66% for operation at maximum power), and the range of electrical yields obtained for the system is between 59.5 and 60.5% PCI (lower calorific value of hydrogen out of the tank). An H 2 burner is used in addition for the desorption heat for regimes for which the heat collected on the oil loop is not sufficient. The system 10 therefore comprises a storage of hydrogen by hydrides of the magnesium hydride type MgH 2 at a pressure of 10 bars and at 380 ° C., consuming 75 kJ per mole of H 2 released. The high temperature heat recovered from the exchangers is used to desorb the hydrogen, as well as to compensate for the heat losses in the process. The hydride tank 12 requires the addition of a desorption energy equal to 75 kJ / (mole of H 2 desorbed) and at a temperature above 380 ° C. By taking into account pinching in high temperature exchangers, only process heat above 400 ° C can be recovered for this purpose. Heat losses on the process, on the cell 11 and the tank 12, of 2.7 kW to be compensated are also taken into account. In the event of a lack of heat recovered from the high temperature exchangers, part of the desorbed hydrogen is burned to provide additional energy. The flow rates of the various fluids were fixed as follows: for hydrogen H 2 , the flow rate is constant and fixed at 12 NmL / min / (cm 2 of cell); and for the primary air, the flow is sufficient to limit the rise in temperature in the stack 11 to 150 ° C. Furthermore, the cooling strategy is as follows: the temperature of the hydrogen entering the cell 11 is constant and equal to 700 ° C; the temperature of the air entering the cell 11 is constant and equal to 600 ° C; the stack outlet temperature is kept constant and equal to 850 ° C for the two streams; the primary air flow is adjusted to keep the temperature at the outlet of the cell constant, up to a maximum flow of 48 NmL / min / (cm 2 of cell). The results obtained are represented graphically in FIG. 8, which shows the evolution of the air flow Da, expressed in NmL / min / (cm 2 of cell), as a function of the electrical power P of the process, expressed in kW, and also in FIG. 9, which shows the evolution of the electrical efficiency R of the process in destocking mode, expressed in percentages, as a function of the net power P of the process, expressed in kW, and finally in FIG. 10, which shows l evolution of the consumption of hydrogen in hydrogen, expressed in g / h, as a function of the net power P of the process, expressed in kW. In this FIG. 10, the curve Ca represents the total consumption of H 2 , and the curve Cb represents the consumption of H 2 burned for additional heat. The net power P of the process is defined as being the electrical production AC of the battery 11 and of the associated turbine (primary air circuit) from which the consumption of the compressors and recirculators is subtracted. The yield R of the process is defined as follows: R = Net power of process P in AC injected into the network / [PCIh2 * Flow rate of H 2 consumed] The net power of the process corresponds to the power produced by the battery, to which the consumption of auxiliaries (compressors, cold groups and power electronics) is subtracted. The system 10 thus makes it possible to operate over a wide range of power, while keeping a high electrical efficiency. The process is thus able to take advantage of the storage of the hydride reservoir 12, which has the strong point of a high density of hydrogen storage (on hydride of the MgH 2 type, the mass 5% of hydrogen is reached. ), without external heat to desorb the hydrogen, which a conventional system, such as a low temperature battery system (PEM, etc.) cannot do. Three flow system This system 10 is illustrated with the aid of FIGS. 11, 12 and 13. In this case, the SOEC fuel cell 11 of the system 10 according to the invention comprises an interconnector 5 of the three-flow type (allowing heat exchange with a coolant separate from the cathode and anode streams) as described above, the presence of which in the fuel cell 11 is symbolized by the reference F3 in FIGS. 11, 12 and 13. Furthermore, as can be seen in these figures, the fuel cell 11 comprises an anode A and a cathode C, as described above. The heat transfer fluids referenced below on the various circuits of FIGS. 11, 12 and 13 are pooled in order to provide the heat required for the desorption of hydrogen from the hydride tank 12. The operation of the H 2 dihydrogen circuit is successively detailed below, then the operation of the primary air circuit and finally the operation of the cooling circuit achievable by means of the three-flow interconnector. Dihydrogen circuit Η 2 This circuit is illustrated with reference to FIG. 11. In this FIG. 11, the parts in dotted lines refer to the primary air circuit and to the cooling circuit detailed below with reference to FIGS. 12 and 13. Advantageously, the dihydrogen circuit H 2 forms a loop allowing the recycling of the hydrogen not consumed in the fuel cell 11. A conversion close to 100% of the hydrogen is thus obtained. The operation of the dihydrogen circuit H 2 in destocking mode of a system 3 with three flows is advantageously practically similar to that described above for a system 10 with air recirculation. Thus, reference should be made to the preceding description given for the example of embodiment in FIG. 6. Primary air circuit This circuit is illustrated with reference to FIG. 12. In this FIG. 12, the parts in dotted lines refer to the dihydrogen circuit H 2 and to the cooling circuit detailed respectively before and below with reference to FIGS. 11 and 13. The primary air circuit aims to supply the fuel cell 11 with oxygen O 2 . The operation of the primary air circuit in destocking mode of a three-flow system 10 is described below. Ambient air, represented by the Fairi arrow, is compressed in a compression pump 48 up to the working pressure, between 2 and 15 bars, or even between 8 and 12 bars. Then, this air is preheated through a heat exchanger 47 by the gases leaving the fuel cell 11 before being injected into the fuel cell 11 at the cathode C. The depleted and heated air leaves the fuel cell 11, then is cooled by the heat exchanger 47 in which the air entering the fuel cell circulates. 11. Then the air passes through a heat exchanger 49, forming a heat recovery unit, to recover the heat by means of the heat transfer fluid FC. The air then passes through a turbine 43 in order to recover a maximum of the initial compression work, before being returned to the atmosphere, represented by the arrow F a ir2, after possible cooling to remove the remaining heat. The compression pump 48 and the turbine 43 may have a common axis to maximize the recovery of mechanical energy. Furthermore, it is possible to put a burner associated with an H2 connection situated between the heat exchanger 47 and the heat exchanger 49 in order to provide additional heat in the event that the heat supplied by the cell 11 does not is not sufficient to meet the needs. Cooling system This circuit is illustrated with reference to FIG. 13. In this FIG. 13, the parts in dashed lines refer to the dihydrogen circuit H2 and to the primary air circuit detailed previously with reference to FIGS. 11 and 12. The cooling circuit by a cooler gas also has the function of cooling the cell 11. It operates in a closed circuit in order to limit the compression requirements. The operation of the cooling circuit in destocking mode of a three-flow system 10 is described below. The hot flow Fchaud leaves the fuel cell 11, then is cooled through a heat exchanger 90 of the gas / gas type by the incoming fluid F by entering the fuel cell 11. Then, the flow still crosses a another heat exchanger 91, forming a heat recovery unit, responsible for recovering the heat by means of a heat transfer fluid FC. The flow is then completely cooled through another heat exchanger 92 of the gas / gas type by the recompressed fluid F compressed in order to combat pressure drops in the circuit, then it still passes through a super-cooling device 93 before to be compressed by the compression pump 94. Then, the compressed gaseous fluid is preheated by the outlet flow from the cell 11 at the heat exchangers 92 and 90 before being injected into the fuel cell 11. It should be noted that the fluid used as the third channel F3 can be any gas that cannot be condensed in the temperature and pressure ranges of the process considered. It must also be non-corrosive to the various process materials with which it is in contact. The air can preferably be chosen to fulfill these conditions, further having the advantage of not requiring any particular storage. It should also be noted that the third channel F3 can either represent a heat exchanger integrated into the stack, in a similar manner to patent application GB 2 151840 A, or the enclosure containing the stacks in the case where stacks optimized for exchange with the enclosure by convective exchange, similarly to patent application US 2006/105213 Al or radiative, similarly to international application WO 2013/060869 Al. The system 10 can also include a fluid reservoir, when it does not correspond to the air, a compressor making it possible to add fluid at the right pressure in the loop in the event of an increase in the flow rate required by the system 10, and a purge valve to the fluid reservoir, reducing the flow of coolant through the loop. The system 10 can also, when the heat transfer fluid is air, include a compressor making it possible to add air at the right pressure in the loop in the event of an increase in the flow of heat transfer fluid required by the system 10, and a purge valve to the atmosphere, making it possible to reduce the flow of cooling air in the loop. Furthermore, if additional heat is required to be recovered from the high temperature heat exchangers 31, 49 and 91, part of the hydrogen from the hydride tank 12 can be mixed with the air from the primary cycle as oxidizer. in order to be burned in a combustion chamber located upstream of the exchanger under consideration. Advantageously, the three-flow system allows the production of electricity, potentially decarbonated and / or renewable depending on the origin of the electricity used to produce the hydrogen. In addition, it allows the production of heat, required for the desorption of hydrogen in the hydride tank 12, with the possibility of burning a little hydrogen if the fuel cell 11 does not provide enough herself. This eliminates the need for a high temperature heat source external to the system 10. In addition, it allows a range of electrical and / or thermal power achievable which is wide around the nominal (45-105% in the example described here) . Finally, although a lower efficiency is obtained compared with an air recirculation system, described above, due to the compression of the cathode air which thus increases the consumption of the compressors, this solution does not require storage. oxygen. It also allows a better maximum current density due to the greater maximum air flow (cathode air and heat transfer fluid) which ensures better cooling of the system. Example of realization We will now describe an exemplary embodiment of a SOFC fuel cell 11 thermally coupled to a hydride tank 12 in destocking mode with a three-flow system 10. The different values cited in the following example come from simulations carried out on the ProsimPlus software from thermodynamic models of cell cells as well as auxiliaries (pumps, converters, etc.). The purpose of system 10 of this example is to provide electricity with high efficiency and a wide power range. The hydrides are stored in the hydrides reservoir 12 at a pressure of 10 bars. The power generation range is between 28 and 68 kW AC injectable on the network, being between 33.5 and 77.6 kW for fuel cell 11 (PCI efficiency varying from 83% for operation at minimum power at 63% for its operation at maximum power), and the range of yields obtained is between 50 and 54% PCI (lower calorific value of the hydrogen introduced). An H 2 burner is used in addition for the desorption heat. The chosen coolant is air. The system 10 therefore comprises a storage of hydrogen by hydrides of the magnesium hydride type MgH 2 at a pressure of 10 bars and at 380 ° C., consuming 75 kJ per mole of H 2 released. The heat recovered from the exchangers is used to desorb the hydrogen, as well as to compensate for the heat losses in the process. The hydride tank 12 requires the addition of a desorption energy equal to 75 kJ / (mole of H 2 desorbed) and at a temperature above 380 ° C. By taking into account pinching in high temperature exchangers, only process heat above 400 ° C can be recovered for this purpose. Heat losses on the process, on the cell 11 and the tank 12, of 2.7 kW to be compensated are also taken into account. In the event of a lack of heat recovered from the exchangers, part of the desorbed hydrogen is burned upstream of the heat exchanger forming a heat recovery unit in the primary air circuit. The flow rates of the various fluids were fixed as follows: for hydrogen H 2 , the flow rate is constant and fixed at 12 NmL / min / (cm 2 of cell); for primary air, the maximum flow rate is 17 NmL / min / (cm 2 of cell); and for cooling air, the flow rate is between 0 and 48 NmL / min / (cm 2 of cell). Furthermore, the cooling strategy is as follows: the temperature of the hydrogen entering the cell 11 is constant and equal to 700 ° C; the temperature of the primary and cooling air entering the cell 11 is constant and equal to 600 ° C; the battery outlet temperature is kept constant and equal to 850 ° C; at low power, the cooling air flow is cut, and the primary air flow is adjusted to obtain the correct battery outlet temperature; when the power increases, the primary air flow is increased until reaching 17 NmL / min / (cubic cm 2 ), and the primary air flow is then increased up to a maximum flow of 48 NmL / min / (cm 2 of cell). The results obtained are represented graphically in Figure 14, which shows the evolution of the primary air flow Dair primary and cooling air Air cooling, expressed in NmL / min / (cm 2 of cell), as a function of the net electrical power (AC) P of the process, expressed in kW, and also in FIG. 15, which shows the evolution of the electrical efficiency R of the process, expressed in percentages, as a function of the net power (AC) P of the process, expressed in kW, and finally in FIG. 16, which shows the evolution of the consumption Ch2 in dihydrogen, expressed in kg / h, as a function the net power P of the process, expressed in kW. In this figure 16, the curve Ca represents the total consumption of H2, and the curve Cb represents the consumption of H2 burned for additional heat. The net power P of the process is defined as being the electrical production of the battery 11 and of the associated turbine (primary air circuit) from which the consumption of the compressors and recirculators is subtracted. The whole is counted at the output of the system, therefore in AC power. The electrical efficiency R of the process is defined as follows: R = Net electrical power of the process P / [PCIh2 * Flow rate of H2 consumed] The net process power corresponds to the production of the battery and the turbine, from which the consumption of the system is subtracted, namely that of the compressors, cold utilities and power electronics. System 10 does indeed offer a wider power range, because taking the optimum efficiency as nominal (54.12% at 63.9 kW net electric), we obtain a range in usable power going from 44 to 106% of nominal . The process is thus able to take advantage of the storage of the hydride reservoir 12, which has the strong point of a high density of hydrogen storage (on hydride of the Mghh type, we reach 5% by mass of hydrogen) , without external heat input to desorb the hydrogen, which a more conventional system, such as a low temperature battery system (PEM, etc.) cannot do. It should be noted that for the systems with air recirculation and three flows described above, the rate of use of hydrogen H2 (fraction of the incoming hydrogen consumed by the cell 11) is preferably less than 80% so limiting the degradation of the cells of the cell 11. In addition, the air flow rate is preferably chosen so that the oxygen O2 rate at the outlet of the fuel cell 11 is at least 10%. If there is a significant cooling requirement, the air flow can be increased, to a maximum of approximately 48 NmL / min / (cm 2 of cell) on average. Furthermore, for both air recirculation and three flow systems, driving the system 10 to meet fluctuating electrical power requirements as regards the choice of the flow rate of dihydrogen H2 can be carried out in three main ways on the circuit hydrogen H2, namely: - a constant rate of use: the hydrogen flow rate is adjusted so that the fraction of hydrogen consumed remains constant. This configuration is limited by the maximum flow rate of the different gases (hydrogen, air and coolant) accepted by each channel of the fuel cell; - constant flow of hydrogen H2: the flow of hydrogen entering the fuel cell is kept constant, which has the effect of increasing the utilization rate with the increase in power. This configuration is limited by the maximum admissible rate of use by the cell to limit the degradations; - flow of hydrogen H2 and variable power: the system modifies both the flow of hydrogen entering the cell and the fraction that is consumed. This configuration requires extensive command and control, particularly on the conduct of air and coolant flows, but offers a wider range of power response than the two modes presented above. As for the choice of primary air flow, it directly depends on the regime used. It is preferably maintained so as to keep the temperature rise relatively constant, and less than 150 ° C. The air flow must also ensure the supply of oxygen, and remains planned not to drop below 10% of oxygen leaving the fuel cell. As for the choice of the cooling fluid flow for a three-flow system, this is adjusted so as to keep the temperature rise in the fuel cell below maximum heating. Furthermore, in the examples described above relating to the destocking mode, the additional heat necessary to desorb the hydrogen, which cannot be provided by simple recovery, is ensured by burning part of the hydrogen. We can also consider a contribution by electric heater, even if the electricity can be of a high price during an operation in destocking mode, and that that will impact the output of the system. In addition, the system 10 can operate in a degraded mode. In particular, in storage mode, the hydrogen produced can be used for other uses than for storage in the hydride tank 12. This however requires a heat source to vaporize the water and to compensate for the absence of heat supplied by the tank which does not absorb the hydrogen produced. It can be from an electrical source, resulting in a sharp drop in the efficiency of the system, or from an external source, for example from an annex process. In destocking mode, in the event of exhaustion of the hydride reservoir 12, it is possible to use another source of hydrogen, for example by pressure or liquid storage. There is then an excess of heat which must be evacuated. It can be removed from the system, for example by injection into a district heating network, by use by a third-party system, among others, or else it can be eliminated by the process, in which case an additional cooling system is required. , for example an air cooler. Furthermore, in the three-flow system presented above, the air from the cathode operates in an open cycle in order to supply the oxygen necessary for the reaction. It is however conceivable to operate with air recycling, similar to that described for the air recirculation system. This would reduce the work of air compression on the cathode side, and thus slightly increase the efficiency. This would also make it possible to work at a current density greater than that obtained in the two systems envisaged, the flow rate of cooling fluid then passing by twice 48 NmL / min / (cm 2 of cell). However, this would require oxygen storage, to ensure the complement of that consumed by the reaction at the cathode. If we look at the electrical storage efficiency of the installation, represented by a complete storage cycle (conversion efficiency from electricity to absorbed hydrogen (PCI) optimal of 87%), followed by a complete destocking cycle (optimal yield conversion of absorbed hydrogen to electricity of 54% in the case of a 3-flow system, and 60% in the case of an air recirculation system), which corresponds to the efficiency of the installation used for the storage of l 'energy, we obtain electricity storage yields of 47% (3 flow system) and 52% (air recirculation system). This is higher than the performance that can be expected from a low temperature storage chain (composed of a PEM or alkaline type chlorinator, and a PEM battery) which displays around 20% system efficiency. Of course, the invention is not limited to the exemplary embodiments which have just been described. Various modifications can be made by those skilled in the art. The invention finds applications in several technical fields of industry, and mainly for the storage of electrical energy in the form of hydrogen. The dimensioning of the system 10, and in particular of the electrolyser 11 and of the hydride tank 12, is then carried out according to the requirements for restored power and available electricity resources. The system 10 can advantageously be coupled with renewable energies, for example of the photovoltaic and / or wind type, in order to achieve a guarantee of electricity production. Then, a network injection profile can be achieved, by producing electricity when the initial source of production of renewable energy is too low, for example at night for photovoltaics, and by storing it in the form of hydrogen when a surplus of production manifests itself. It is possible to design a system 10 dedicated to the production of hydrogen absorbed on hydrides, with replacement of the tank 12 when it is full, but all the same having this possibility of producing electricity, when for example the price electricity on a conventional market is high. Furthermore, the storage and destocking modes described above can be used independently and for different applications. For example, the hydrogen stored on hydrides constitutes a mode of transport of hydrogen. It is therefore possible via this process to supply consumers of hydrogen by an integrated and efficient production process, the destocking of hydrogen on a customer site which can then benefit from external heat supplies, such as waste heat.
权利要求:
Claims (26) [1" id="c-fr-0001] 1. System (10) for reversible electrolysis of water at high temperature, characterized in that it comprises: - a device forming a reversible high temperature electrolyser (11), configured to operate according to a solid oxide electrolyser mode of the SOEC type, for the production of hydrogen and thus the storage of electricity, and / or according to a battery mode with solid oxide fuel of the SOFC type, for the consumption of hydrogen and thus the destocking of electricity, said reversible electrolyser (11) being configured to operate under a pressure of between 2 and 15 bars, - a hydride tank (12), thermally coupled with said reversible electrolyser (11), configured to store hydrogen in the form of hydrides in the SOEC type solid oxide electrolyser mode of said reversible electrolyser (11) and / or to release the hydrogen in SOFC type solid oxide fuel cell mode from said reversible electrolyser (11), the system (10) being configured to allow, when the reversible electrolyser (11) is configured to operate in a mode SOEC type solid oxide chlorinator, recovery of the heat given off by the hydride tank (11) during the absorption of hydrogen to produce pressurized water vapor intended to enter the chlorinator reversible (11), and to allow, when the reversible electrolyser (11) is configured to operate in a solid oxide fuel cell mode of the SOFC type, recovery of the heat released by the or the es outgoing flows from the reversible electrolyser (11) to allow the desorption of hydrogen from the hydride tank (12). [2" id="c-fr-0002] 2. System according to claim 1, characterized in that the reversible electrolyser (11) comprises a stack of elementary electrochemical cells (Cl, C2) with solid oxides each formed by a cathode (2.1, 2.2), an anode (4.2) and an electrolyte (3.2) interposed between the cathode and the anode, and a plurality of electrical and fluidic interconnectors (5) each arranged between two adjacent elementary cells. [3" id="c-fr-0003] 3. System according to claim 1 or 2, characterized in that the reversible electrolyser (11) is configured to operate according to a solid oxide electrolyser mode of the SOEC type, and in that the system (10) then comprises: - a steam generator (18), intended to produce steam for the reversible electrolyser (11) by means of the heat released by the hydride tank (12), during the absorption of hydrogen, and supplied to the steam generator (18) by means of a heat transfer fluid (FC). [4" id="c-fr-0004] 4. System according to claim 3, characterized in that it further comprises: - one or more heat exchangers (16, 17, 20, 21) allowing preheating of the inlet water (H 2 O t otai) of the system (10) and / or superheating of the incoming water vapor in the reversible electrolyser (11), through the flows of hydrogen (H 2 ) and oxygen (O 2 ) leaving the reversible electrolyser (11). [5" id="c-fr-0005] 5. System according to claim 4, characterized in that it comprises heat exchangers (16, 17, 20, 21) upstream and downstream of the steam generator (18) to respectively allow the preheating of the the inlet water (H 2 O t otai) of the system (10) and the superheating of the water vapor entering the reversible electrolyser (11), through the flows of hydrogen (H 2 ) and d oxygen (O 2 ) leaving the reversible electrolyser (11). [6" id="c-fr-0006] 6. System according to any one of claims 3 to 5, characterized in that it further comprises: - a condenser (23), coupled to a phase separator (13), intended to receive the unreacted water vapor in the reversible electrolyser (11) and the dihydrogen (Hh) produced by the reversible electrolyser (11) and condensing the unreacted water (hbOrécup) to allow its recycling within the system (10). [7" id="c-fr-0007] 7. System according to any one of claims 3 to 6, characterized in that it further comprises: - a compression pump (14), intended to compress the inlet water (HzOtotai) of the system (10) to a pressure between 2 and 15 bars. [8" id="c-fr-0008] 8. System according to any one of claims 3 to 7, characterized in that it further comprises: - an electric heater (22) upstream of the reversible electrolyser (11), ensuring additional overheating of the steam, in particular up to 800 ° C. [9" id="c-fr-0009] 9. System according to any one of claims 6 to 8, characterized in that it further comprises: - a dryer (24), upstream of the hydride tank (12) and downstream of the phase separator (13), intended to make it possible to remove the moisture contained in the dihydrogen (H2) before storage in the tank hydrides (12). [10" id="c-fr-0010] 10. System according to claim 1 or 2, characterized in that the reversible electrolyser (11) is configured to operate according to a solid oxide fuel cell mode of the SOFC type under pressure, and in that the system (10) then includes: - at least one heat exchanger (30, 38, 47, 90), intended to preheat at least one flow entering the reversible electrolyser (11) by means of at least one flow leaving the reversible electrolyser (11 ). [11" id="c-fr-0011] 11. System according to claim 1 or 2 or according to claim 10, characterized in that the reversible electrolyser (11) is configured to operate according to a solid oxide fuel cell mode of the SOFC type, and in that the system (10) then includes: - at least one heat exchanger (31, 39, 49, 91), intended to recover high temperature heat coming from at least one flow leaving the reversible electrolyser (11) by means of at least one fluid heat transfer medium (FC), in particular to allow the desorption of hydrogen from the hydride tank (12). [12" id="c-fr-0012] 12. System according to claim 1 or 2, characterized in that the reversible electrolyser (11) is configured to operate according to a solid oxide fuel cell mode of the SOFC type, and in that the system (10) is of the type "recirculating compressed air system", consisting of a dihydrogen circuit and a primary air circuit. [13" id="c-fr-0013] 13. System according to claim 1 or 2, characterized in that the reversible electrolyser (11) is configured to operate according to a solid oxide fuel cell mode of the SOFC type, and in that the system (10) is of the "three-flow system" type, consisting of a dihydrogen circuit, a primary air circuit and a cooling circuit using an "three-flow" type interconnector (5). [14" id="c-fr-0014] 14. System according to claim 12 or 13, characterized in that the dihydrogen circuit comprises: means for mixing (Ml) the hydrogen coming from the hydride tank (12) with the total recycling of the hydrogen (hhresiduei) not consumed in the reversible electrolyser (11) over a pressure range from 2 to 15 bars, - a heat exchanger (30), intended to preheat the incoming hydrogen flow (Hhtotai) in the reversible electrolyser (11) by means of the outgoing dihydrogen flow (H 2 ) from the reversible electrolyser (11), - a heat exchanger (31), forming a heat recovery unit, intended to recover heat from the outgoing hydrogen flow (H 2 ) from the reversible electrolyser (11) by means of at least one heat transfer fluid (FC ). [15" id="c-fr-0015] 15. The system of claim 14, characterized in that it further comprises a heat exchanger (33), intended to cool the flow of dihydrogen leaving (H 2 ) from the heat exchanger (31), forming a recuperator of heat, by the flow of hydrogen (H 2 ) leaving a phase separator (34), allowing the recovery of the water produced. [16" id="c-fr-0016] 16. System according to claim 12, characterized in that the primary air circuit comprises: a heat exchanger (38), intended to preheat the air flow entering the reversible electrolyzer (11) by means of the air flow leaving the reversible electrolyser (11), - a heat exchanger (39), forming a heat recovery unit, intended to recover high temperature heat from the air flow leaving the reversible electrolyser (11) by means of at least one heat transfer fluid (FC) . [17" id="c-fr-0017] 17. The system of claim 16, characterized in that it further comprises means for mixing (Ml) the air flow leaving the heat exchanger (39), forming a heat recovery unit, with a complement of oxygen (F02) forming a total flow of air entering the reversible electrolyser (11). [18" id="c-fr-0018] 18. System according to claim 17, characterized in that it further comprises: - a heat exchanger (40) and a cooling device (41), making it possible to cool the total flow of air mixed by the mixing means (Ml), - A compression pump (42), for compressing the air leaving the cooling device (41) before injection into the heat exchanger (40) for preheating. [19" id="c-fr-0019] 19. System according to claim 13, characterized in that the primary air circuit comprises: a heat exchanger (47), intended to preheat the air flow entering the reversible electrolyser (11) by means of the air flow leaving the reversible electrolyser (11), - A heat exchanger (49), forming a heat recovery unit, intended to recover heat from the air flow leaving the reversible electrolyser (11) by means of at least one heat transfer fluid (FC). [20" id="c-fr-0020] 20. System according to claim 13, characterized in that the cooling circuit comprises: a heat exchanger (90), intended to preheat the incoming flow (Fentrant) in the reversible electrolyser (11) by means of the hot flow (Fchaud) leaving the reversible electrolyser (11), a heat exchanger (91), forming a heat recovery unit, intended to recover heat from the hot flow (Fchaud) leaving the reversible electrolyser (11) by means of at least one heat transfer fluid (FC), - a heat exchanger (92) and a super-cooling device (93), intended to cool the hot flow (Fchaud) leaving the heat exchanger (91), - a compression pump (94), intended to compress the flow leaving the heat exchanger (92) and the super-cooling device (93), to form a flow of compressed fluid (F compressed) to cool the hot flow (Fchaud) leaving the heat exchanger (92). [21" id="c-fr-0021] 21. A method of storing and / or destocking electricity by reversible electrolysis of water at high temperature, characterized in that it is implemented by means of a system (10) for reversible electrolysis of the high temperature water according to any one of the preceding claims, and in that it comprises the steps of: - when the reversible electrolyser (11) under pressure operates according to a solid oxide electrolyser mode of the SOEC type, recovery of the heat released by the hydride tank (12) during the absorption of hydrogen to produce pressurized water vapor intended to enter the reversible electrolyser (11), and - when the reversible electrolyser (11) under pressure is configured to operate according to a solid oxide fuel cell mode of the SOFC type, recovery of the heat released by the outgoing stream (s) of the reversible electrolyser (11) to allow desorption of hydrogen from the hydride reservoir (12). [22" id="c-fr-0022] 22. The method as claimed in claim 21, characterized in that it is implemented according to an electricity storage mode, the reversible high temperature electrolyser (11) being configured to operate according to a solid oxide electrolyser mode of the SOEC type, and the method comprising the step of carrying out the high temperature electrolysis reaction of water vapor to produce hydrogen and thus store electricity. [23" id="c-fr-0023] 23. The method of claim 22, characterized in that it is implemented by means of a system (10) for reversible electrolysis of water at high temperature according to claims 5, 6 and 7, and in that that it comprises the following successive stages: - introduction of total water (H 2 O t otai) from the system (10), comprising injection water (H 2 O) and recycled water (H 2 O r ecu P ) from the separator phases (13), in the compression pump (14) up to a pressure between 2 and 15 bars, - circulation of the total water (H 2 O t otai) of the system (10) through heat exchangers (16, 17) to allow preheating of the inlet water (H 2 O t otai) of the system (10) via the flows of hydrogen (H 2 ) and oxygen (O 2 ) leaving the reversible electrolyser (11), - introduction of the inlet water (H 2 O t otai) of the system (10) into the steam generator (18), to produce pressurized steam for the reversible electrolyser ( 11) by means of the heat released by the hydride tank (12), during the absorption of hydrogen, and brought to the steam generator (18) by a heat transfer fluid (FC), - circulation of water vapor through heat exchangers (20, 21) to allow the water vapor to overheat before entering the reversible electrolyser (11), by means of hydrogen flows (H2) and oxygen (O2) leaving the reversible electrolyser (11), - additional superheating of the steam in order to reach the working temperature of the electrolyser (11) using an electric heater, - introduction of pressurized steam into the reversible electrolyser (11) for the production of hydrogen (H2) and oxygen (O2) flows, - cooling of the hydrogen (H2) and oxygen (O2) flows through the heat exchangers (16,17, 20, 21), - condensation of unreacted pressurized steam in the phase separator (13) to produce recycling water (HhOrécup) reintroduced into the system (10), - storage of the hydrogen (H2) product dried in the hydride tank (12). [24" id="c-fr-0024] 24. The method of claim 21, characterized in that it is implemented according to a mode of destocking of electricity, the reversible high temperature electrolyser (11) being configured to operate according to a solid oxide fuel cell mode SOFC type, and the method comprising the step of carrying out the reverse reaction of high temperature electrolysis of water vapor to destock hydrogen and thereby produce electricity. [25" id="c-fr-0025] 25. The method of claim 24, characterized in that it is implemented by means of a system (10) for reversible electrolysis of water at high temperature of the type "compressed air recirculation system" according to claim 12, the system (10) further being according to claims 14 to 18, and in that it comprises the following successive steps: • for the dihydrogen (H2) circuit: - mixing of the hydrogen coming from the hydride tank (12) with the total recycling of the hydrogen (hkresiduei) not consumed in the reversible electrolyser (11) by means of the mixing means (Ml), - injection of total hydrogen (Hhtotai) through the heat exchanger (30) allowing its preheating by the outgoing hydrogen flow (H2) from the reversible electrolyser (11), - injection of total hydrogen (Hhtotai) into the reversible electrolyser (11) for its consumption and the production of water, electricity and heat, - cooling of the hydrogen flow leaving the reversible electrolyser (11) by the preheating heat exchanger (30), - cooling of the hydrogen flow leaving the heat exchanger (30) for preheating by the heat exchanger (31), forming a heat recovery unit, making it possible to recover the heat by exchanging it with a heat transfer fluid (FC) , - separation between the hydrogen flow (hhrésîduei) and the flow of produced water from the phase separator (34), - recycling of hydrogen not consumed by only recompressing it with the value of the pressure drops, • for the primary air circuit: injection of the air leaving the reversible electrolyser (11) through the cooling heat exchanger (38) to be cooled by the compressed air entering the reversible electrolyser (11), - injection of the air leaving the cooling heat exchanger (38) through the heat exchanger (39), forming a heat recovery unit, traversed by a heat transfer fluid (FC), - mixing of the air leaving the heat exchanger (39), forming a heat recovery unit, by mixing means (Ml) with an additional flow of compressed oxygen (F02), - injection of this mixture into a heat exchanger (40), then a cooling device (41), then a compression pump (42) to compensate for pressure losses and to obtain compressed air injected into this heat exchanger cooling heat (40) downstream of the mixing means (Ml), - injection of air from the cooling heat exchanger (40) into the heat exchanger (38) for preheating, then injection into the reversible electrolyser (11) at the target pressure of 2 to 15 bars . [26" id="c-fr-0026] 26. The method of claim 24, characterized in that it is implemented by means of a system (10) of reversible electrolysis under pressure of high temperature water of the type "three-flow system" according to the claim 13, the system (10) being further according to claims 14,15,19 and 20, and in that it comprises the following successive steps: • for the dihydrogen circuit (H 2 ): - mixing of the hydrogen coming from the hydride tank (12) at the targeted pressure of 2 to 15 bars, with the total recycling of the hydrogen (H 2r ésiduei) not consumed in the reversible electrolyser (11) by the mixing means bias (Ml), - injection of total hydrogen (H 2t otai) at the target pressure of 2 to 15 bars through the heat exchanger (30) allowing its preheating by the outgoing hydrogen flow (H 2 ) from the electrolyser reversible (11), - injection of total hydrogen (H 2t otai) at the target pressure of 2 to 15 bars in the reversible electrolyser (11) for its consumption and the production of water, electricity and heat, - cooling of the hydrogen flow leaving the reversible electrolyser (11) by the preheating heat exchanger (30), - cooling of the hydrogen flow leaving the heat exchanger (30) for preheating by the heat exchanger (31), forming a heat recovery unit, making it possible to recover the heat by exchanging it with a heat transfer fluid (FC) , - separation between the hydrogen flow (H 2r ésiduei) and the produced water flow from the phase separator (34), - recycling of hydrogen not consumed by only recompressing it with the value of the pressure drops in the assembly, • for the primary air circuit: - injection of ambient air (Fairi) into a compression pump (48) up to a pressure between 2 and 15 bars, - preheating of the air entering the preheating heat exchanger (47) via the air flow leaving the reversible electrolyser (11), - injection of the preheated incoming air into the reversible electrolyser (11) at the target pressure, - cooling of the air leaving the reversible electrolyser (11) in the preheating heat exchanger (47), - cooling the air leaving the heat exchanger (47) for preheating through the heat exchanger (49), forming a heat recovery unit, to obtain heat by means of at least one heat transfer fluid (FC), injection of the air leaving the heat exchanger (47), forming a heat recovery unit, in a gas turbine (43) before ejecting the air leaving (Fa ·, • cooling circuit: - cooling of the hot flow (Fchaud) leaving the reversible electrolyser (11) through the heat exchanger (90) preheating by the incoming fluid (F entering) in the reversible electrolyser (11), - cooling of the flow leaving the preheating heat exchanger (90) in the heat exchanger (91), forming a heat recovery unit, by means of at least one heat transfer fluid (FC), - total cooling of the flow leaving the heat exchanger (91), forming a heat recovery unit, in a heat exchanger (92) by the flow of recompressed fluid (F compressed), injection of the flow leaving the heat exchanger (92) traversed by the flow of recompressed fluid (F compressed) into a super-cooling device (93), then a compression pump (94), - preheating of the flow leaving the compression pump (94) by the flow leaving the reversible electrolyser (11) before entering the reversible electrolyser (11) at the target pressure of 2 to 15 bars, in particular 8 to 12 bars. S, 58929 elementary Elementary pattern Heat to be removed 2/8 .Current product Xi H 2 (+ H 2 O) Depleted air Heat vent M1 H, Orécup
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同族专利:
公开号 | 公开日 FR3056230B1|2020-02-28| EP3516093A1|2019-07-31| WO2018051041A1|2018-03-22| JP2019534940A|2019-12-05| US20190245224A1|2019-08-08| CA3037108A1|2018-03-22|
引用文献:
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申请号 | 申请日 | 专利标题 FR1658750|2016-09-19| FR1658750A|FR3056230B1|2016-09-19|2016-09-19|HIGH-TEMPERATURE WATER REVERSIBLE ELECTROLYSIS SYSTEM COMPRISING A HYDRIDE TANK COUPLED TO THE ELECTROLYSER|FR1658750A| FR3056230B1|2016-09-19|2016-09-19|HIGH-TEMPERATURE WATER REVERSIBLE ELECTROLYSIS SYSTEM COMPRISING A HYDRIDE TANK COUPLED TO THE ELECTROLYSER| US16/333,299| US20190245224A1|2016-09-19|2017-09-18|System for high-temperature reversible electrolysis of water comprising a hydride tank coupled with the electrolyser| CA3037108A| CA3037108A1|2016-09-19|2017-09-18|System for high-temperature reversible electrolysis of water comprising a hydride tank coupled with the electrolyser| EP17780483.8A| EP3516093A1|2016-09-19|2017-09-18|System for high-temperature reversible electrolysis of water comprising a hydride tank coupled with the electrolyser| JP2019515352A| JP2019534940A|2016-09-19|2017-09-18|System for high temperature reversible electrolysis of water including a hydride tank combined with an electrolyzer| PCT/FR2017/052478| WO2018051041A1|2016-09-19|2017-09-18|System for high-temperature reversible electrolysis of water comprising a hydride tank coupled with the electrolyser| 相关专利
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